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ENDURANCE - Participants at the annual Spartan Race made their way through obstacles set up around Heritage Ranch last weekend. The race is designed to test competitors’ physical and mental endurance. Zachary Cormier/Red Deer Express
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RED DEER EXPRESS 3
Local woman develops cooking show for young foodies Just One Bite is set to air first episode on Sept. 12th on ShawTV BY KALISHA MENDONSA RED DEER EXPRESS
A
Red Deer local is looking forward to the launch of a brand new collaborative cooking show with young foodies titled Just One Bite, set to premiere this month. Creator, Access Producer and Host Meg Tucker is being joined by 10 young Albertans to experience the joy of trying new food, experimenting in a kitchen and of course, enjoying their creations. The show’s first episode will air on ShawTV on Sept. 12th at noon and 7 p.m. “For me this show is just a no-brainer. I’ve always wanted to do this. I love to cook and I love kids,” Tucker said. “Kids are so innocent, they don’t have a filter and they are honest and funny. I get such joy from them. I love being an auntie to my little nieces and nephews, they bring me such a sense of joy. I thought it would be great to do a show with kids and not just a show where we say, ‘Measure this, and stir this.’ “The whole concept of our show is to give kids ‘just one bite’ of certain ingredients and talk about those ingredients and that’s where it’s fun. Some of the kids love what they’re trying and some of them are hysterical, spitting out their food and saying it’s the worst thing they’ve ever eaten. It’s fun.” Just One Bite will work collaboratively with children to teach them about trying new foods, experimenting in the kitchen and developing a love of cooking. Tucker said the process has been an absolute joy from start to finish, and she is very excited to see the final product. She added it was a bit of a learning experience to actually work with the kids, but one that she thoroughly enjoyed. “It is a different process working with kids. You can produce the show and map it out seven ways to Sunday, but when you’re actually there with a little kid beside you, you have to really break it down.,” she said. “For example, I pick up a can and open it without thinking, but some kids might not have ever held a can opener and that’s
a new experience for them. It’s so back to basics and it was fun for me to realize and learn on the spot how step by step you need to be with kids. I think that is something that we, as adults working with kids, forget. “If you have a chance to let kids learn, it’s amazing how they take to it.”
“IF YOU HAVE A CHANCE TO LET KIDS LEARN, IT’S AMAZING HOW THEY TAKE TO IT.” MEG TUCKER
Tucker has had some experience with cooking shows as a contestant on Master Chef Canada, season two. She said she enjoyed her time in that program and felt encouraged to pursue her love of cooking and develop new opportunities for herself. She added she enjoyed the experience, but was looking for a non-competitive environment while developing the child-friendly concept. She was thrilled with the community response to the open call for kids to join and enjoyed the process of finding her young co-stars. “We asked kids to send in a little video showing them being creative and telling me who they were and why they wanted to be on the show. We received videos from all over Alberta and the kids were so cute. I loved watching how excited they were,” she said. “One little girl was dressed up in a full chef outfit and was behind a little booth that looked like a smoothie stand and she worked through her whole recipe and adding ingredients like love - it was just enough to break your heart with sweetness. “For me, this show really re-enforced that this truly is what I want to be doing. I love cooking with kids. They are so innocent and adorable and kind. We had 10 kind, sweet, smart little kids who loved food and wanted to
CREATING TOGETHER - From left, Pierce Woitowicz, 4, and Noah Waldie, 7, joined host Red Deer’s Meg Tucker on the set of Just One Bite, a collaborative cooking show where Tucker is joined by 10 young Albertans to explore new foods and create tasty dishes together. photo submitted learn. That’s what this show is about for me.” Tucker said the experience has also been a little emotional due to the excitement and engagement she sees in the children participating and in the response from their parents on the kids’ participation. “Something that made me well up was getting an email from one of the moms of a young girl on our show telling me they had to stop at the grocery store on the way home from the taping and buy fresh fennel for the girl
to cook with at home. The mom told me her daughter obviously wanted more than just one bite. That to me was amazing - if one kid can go home after shooting or watching the show and want to try something new, that’s fantastic,” Tucker said. “It’s definitely been life-changing, even though we’ve only shot four episodes so far,” she said with a laugh. “It’s been awesome.” The show will be broadcast on television, but will also be available online at justonebite.ca. The
episodes will run for two weeks and then a new episode will air. Tucker said there is already talk of more episodes to be filmed. She said she is excited for the experience and is looking forward to the final product. “People love watching kids. We haven’t even aired yet and this is being received really well. I’m so proud of these 10 Alberta kids who have taken part in this. I feel like a proud mama thanks to all the wonderful kids from around the province who joined me for this.” kmendonsa@reddeerexpress.com
4 RED DEER EXPRESS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
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BY ZACHARY CORMIER RED DEER EXPRESS Coming together was the central theme of the morning in City Hall Park on Tuesday as citizens and community organizations from around Central Alberta gathered as Sheldon Kennedy announced plans for a new Child Advocacy Centre in Red Deer. The new Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre will bring together people and organizations from the community to offer a variety of services to children, youth, and families that have been impacted by child abuse. “That’s what these issues need. We need to be able to share important information in the best interests of the child so that we can have the best outcomes. I’m here to support and help in any way we can,” said Sheldon Kennedy, a former National Hockey League player and longtime child abuse advocate. The new Centre, which is being spearheaded by a committee of local volunteers, will be modelled after the Sheldon Kennedy Child Advocacy Centre in Calgary and will create a single space that brings together the RCMP, Alberta Health Services, Child and Family Services and Mental Health and Addictions to help streamline the effective use of resources to effectively and efficiently investigate and resolve child abuse cases. Mark Jones, the co-chair of the CAC committee and a former principal at Central Middle School in Red Deer, said the sharing of information between organizations greatly reduces the burden on a victim. “I’ll give you a situation of a child who
disclosed that they were being sexually abused. So they do the disclosure to me as the administrator. It’s my responsibility to phone Child and Family Services,” said Jones, adding then the child is taken through a series of interviews with various organizations, including the Child and Family Services and in-depth interviews with the RCMP. “When we went to the Sheldon Kennedy Centre, what we saw was them interview that child in one room. Everybody together, it’s a taped interview. Over 90 per cent of those interviews the child has to do one interview, one time and it’s done. That, to me is monumental.” Kennedy said true integration is the ultimate goal when it comes to dealing with cases of child abuse. “To me this isn’t an end-game. To me this is about progress and to keep making progress, continuous progress. I do know this - when we work together, we’re better. End of story.” While no plans are set in stone in terms of location and costs of the Centre, Jones said the coalition has been discussing a number of different options. “Whether we have a stand alone building or we have a centre where we can have lots of opportunities to have other agencies in there. We’re still in the discussion stages of that. Our hope is to have that finalized hopefully in the next 90 to 120 days.” On Sept. 15th, the committee is hosting a screening of the Sheldon Kennedy documentary Swift Current at the Red Deer College Arts Centre. Jones said the screening will be a launch pad for other fundraising initiatives. zcormier@reddeerexpress.com
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BIG ANNOUNCEMENT - Former NHL player Sheldon Kennedy spoke at a press conference held at City Hall announcing the new Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre for Red Deer. Zachary Cormier/Red Deer Express
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6 RED DEER EXPRESS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
OPINION
New Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre welcomed On Tuesday our City received some tremendous news, thanks in part to some strong community advocates. It was announced the Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre will be coming to Red Deer. Since the first Child Advocacy Centre (CAC) was launched in the U.S. in 1985, CACs have become recognized internationally as an effective and efficient way to support child and youth victims of sexual and physical assault. CACs increase collaboration, reduce costs and speed up prosecutions. The newly announced Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre in Red Deer will become the 26th of its kind across Canada. There are four main types of child abuse, according to the Sheldon Kennedy CAC web site. These include emotional abuse which can be, “Verbal attacks on a child’s sense of self, repeated humiliation or rejection. “Exposure to violence, drugs, alcohol abuse or severe conflict in the home,
forced isolation, restraint or causing a child to be afraid much of the time may also cause emotional harm. Emotional abuse rarely happens only once and it is usually part of a pattern of how the child is being treated.” Neglect is another form of abuse which includes, “Any lack of care that causes serious harm to a child’s development or endangers the child in any way. Physical neglect is the failure to meet the child’s day-to-day basic needs. This includes failing to provide adequate nutrition, clothing, shelter, health care and protection from harm. “Emotional neglect is the failure to meet the child’s ongoing emotional needs for affection and a sense of belonging.” Physical and sexual abuse are also listed as types of abuse. In Alberta, there are 775,175 children aged 0-17 years and 14,400 of those children sustained cases of child abuse, according to the web site. The news of the CAC coming to Red
Deer is definitely a positive one. Any supports that can be offered to children who have suffered any kind of abuse is a welcomed one. One local family was instrumental in bringing the Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre to our community. This month marks the one year anniversary since Rick and Cindy More lost their 22-year-old daughter Lindsey. She took her own life last fall after battling severe depression for a number of years. The couple knew Lindsey struggled with depression, but they did not realize how difficult that struggle was. After Lindsey’s death, Rick and Cindy have decided to turn their personal tragedy into hope for others. Together with help from community members, they have developed the Smiles Thru Lindsey Foundation via the Red Deer and District Community Foundation which is geared towards providing financial help to young adults, teens and
children dealing with depression. Rick has also met with local politicians in the last year in hopes of raising awareness in the community. For more information about the Smiles Thru Lindsey Foundation, check out their facebook page. As for the Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre, details are yet to come regarding the facility but we know there will be many ways in which the community can help. Whether it be by fundraising, volunteering time or just bringing overall awareness, there will be something for everyone to get involved with. It is a positive thing to see supports geared towards helping the youth in our community. We look forward to seeing what the impacts will be once the Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre is up and running in the City, but one thing we know for sure is that impacts will be positive and this will only enhance our community as a whole.
Climate change policies exacting a painful economic toll Alberta’s Finance Minister, Joe Ceci, was more glum than usual when he delivered his recent economic update. A report by Kevin Birn of HIS Energy, called The State of Canadian and U.S. Climate Policy helps explain why.
Barry
COOPER It was mentioned by Financial Post columnist Claudia Catteneo last week and is of interest to all Albertans. The report takes as given that governments around the world, and most important for us, the governments of the U.S. and
Canada, are crafting public policies to deal with ‘climate change’. These policies target so-called greenhouse gasses (GHG) emissions, especially CO2, so that ‘climate change’ really means anthropogenic climate warming. At the intersection of ‘climate change’ and public policy are the oil sands. Contrary to what many NDP supporters and many of my colleagues believe, businesses are more likely to respond to government policies than to set them. One of the responses to egregiously irresponsible policies is to invest elsewhere. The Birn report did not discuss the scientific premises of anthropogenic climate warming nor the prudence of attempting to regulate GHG emissions. What matters are the consequences of policy
choices by the federal governments of Canada and the U.S. for Alberta (and Saskatchewan). Here are some pertinent facts. The interdependence of North American economies and the familiar 10:1 ratio between the two countries means that Canada must always adjust its policies to U.S. realities. That ratio applies to global CO2 emissions (16% for the U.S.; 1.7% for Canada, of which the oil sands’ contribution is miniscule) as well as to GDP and much else. Canada’s CO2 emissions are comparable to those of Texas. The big difference is how that CO2 is generated. Coal is the largest source of the U.S.’s CO2, mostly from electricity generation, followed by transportation and industry. In Canada, industry – from
fertilizer manufacture to mining, smelting and pulp production – is the largest emitter, followed by transportation and then e l e c t r i c i t y - g e n e ra t i o n . The main reason for the difference is that in B.C. and Laurentian Canada (Ontario and Quebec), hydroelectricity is the chief source of power. Prairie rivers furnish great fishing opportunities but few electrons. Since CO2 from U.S. coal-fired plants alone are double those from the entire Canadian economy, they have been the focus of U.S. policies. Replacing coal-generation with natural gas has been made easier by low natural gas prices, partly the result of innovative shale-gas exploitation. In Canada, things are different. Because more than 80% of Canadian electricity
is generated by non-emitting sources, other sectors must be targeted to achieve levels of emission reductions comparable to the Americans’. The cost, however, is bound to be higher: here cheap gas hardly matters. This is what makes carbon taxes so attractive to Canadian governments. They can’t go after coal plants because there are so few left, so they go after the entire economy. Alberta’s carbon tax and Ontario’s cap-andtrade policy mean that more than two-thirds of Canada’s emissions will be covered by next year. Big-government Liberals, socialists, and members of the Green cult will rejoice that we are saving the planet. However, the costs of the new NEP, the National Emissions Policy, achieved by carbon-tax
harmonization, will introduce more incentives for investment in places where anthropogenic climate change is not an unquestioned public policy dogma. Because the prairie petroleum industry competes globally for both capital and markets, parochial Canadian climate policies both add to costs and induce investors abroad. And they make no difference at all to global GHG emissions. That is one reason why energy investment in Alberta is half 2014 levels. No wonder Joe Ceci is sad. The consequences of his party’s own policies are bearing their inevitably poisoned fruit. Barry Cooper is a professor of political science at the University of Calgary. His column is distributed through Troy Media.
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8 RED DEER EXPRESS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
Council to take another look at secondary suites BY ERIN FAWCETT RED DEER EXPRESS One City councillor wants to lower the amount of secondary suites in Red Deer neighbourhoods. Councillor Lawrence Lee put forward a Notice of Motion at last week’s council meeting. The motion stated secondary suites provided an alternate housing option particularly during the economic upswing when housing options were limited, but are less required and desired now that a great variety of house options are routinely available. Currently 15% of the total number of detached dwelling units within a neighbourhood are permitted to have secondary suites, without limitations to the number on a specific street or area. Lee said in his motion that this can result in clustering of secondary suites resulting in neighbourhood impacts in terms of density, noise, traffic, parking, etc. Because of this, Lee has proposed the overall percentage of secondary suites within a given neighbourhood be reduced to 10% of the total number of detached units. He has also proposed the total of secondary suites on any street be limited to no more than 10% of the total number of detached dwelling
units on that street. During last week’s meeting, Lee’s Notice of Motion was tabled for up to 12 weeks so administration could look at the data gathered and bring back a recommendation to council. “There are a couple of neighbourhoods over 15 per cent with the majority of neighbourhoods under 10 per cent,” said Lee. The neighbourhoods exceeding the 15% limit include the South Hill with 22% and West Park (east) with 16%. Michener Hill is also approaching the cap at 14.17%. “Ultimately my intention with this Notice of Motion is to reduce secondary suites all across the City overall. I don’t think they are as accountable or as safe for the community as buildings that are actually built for multi-family dwellings,” said Lee. “I think secondary suites were a temporary measure to address a housing crisis that was in the City. “I believe the better choices are the choices that are built for, planned for and developed as affordable or multi- family housing, as opposed to I want somebody to help pay my mortgage so I am going to put them in a suite, but all of those other building considerations never come into play.” Lee made the Notice of Motion after sitting on the Municipal
Planning Commission and seeing multiple applications for secondary suites come to MPC for approval. “I get to talk to a lot of people and see the letters that are submitted with a lot of second-
ary suite applications. I see the objections that are being submitted and a lot of those arise around elements of safety, parking issues, the care and condition of those secondary suites, neighbourhood appeal and de-
valuation of market - I saw those starting to come to fruition,” he said. “I think this is the start to move towards better neighbourhood planning.” efawcett@reddeerexpress.com
EXCITEMENT - Isla Marsh, 5, and Xander Palmquist, 6, were thrilled with the idea of a new school year with friends, fun and new activities to keep them busy. Local students went back to school late last week. Kalisha Mendonsa/Red Deer Express
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MAINTENANCE • TIRES • BRAKES • OIL & FILTER • BATTERIES • ALIGNMENT Offers may be cancelled or changed at any time without notice. See Quick Lane Manager for complete details. Applicable taxes and provincial levies not included. Quick Lane Dealer may sell for less. Only available at participating locations. ††In order to receive a local competitor’s advertised price: (i) tires must be purchased and installed at your participating Quick Lane Dealer; (ii) customer must present the competitor’s actual, local advertisement (containing the lower price), which must have been printed within 30 days of the sale; and (iii) the tires being purchased must be the same brand, sidewall, speed and load ratings as shown in the competitive advertisement. Offer only available at participating Quick Lane dealerships. This offer is valid on the cost of the tire only and does not include labour costs, valve stems, mounting, balancing, disposal and taxes. Offer does not apply to quotes or advertised prices outside of Canada, in eBay advertisements, by tire wholesalers and online tire retailers, or closeout, special order, discontinued and clearance/ liquidation offers. Limited time offer. Offer may be cancelled or changed at any time without prior notice. See your Quick Lane Manager for details. Only available at participating locations. ±Rebate offers are manufacturer’s mail-in rebates. Rebates available on select Pirelli, Yokohama, Hankook, Michelin, BFGoodrich, Uniroyal, Toyo, Continental (credit card gift card), Bridgestone (gift card), Goodyear (credit card gift card), Dunlop (credit card gift card) and General Tire (credit card gift card) tires. Offers are valid on qualifying sets of four tires, purchased and installed at participating locations during the respective promotion periods for each tire brand. Offers are valid on the cost of the tire(s) only and do not include labour costs, valve stems, mounting, balancing, disposal, and taxes. Amount of rebates (ranging from $35 to $100), start dates and expiration dates (ranging from Sep. 14, 2015 to Dec. 31, 2015) vary depending on tire manufacturer. It is the responsibility of the customer to submit the required claim forms and proof of purchase to the relevant tire manufacturer with sufficient postage by the required deadline for that rebate offer. See your Service Advisor for complete details and claim forms. Quick Lane is a registered trademark of Ford Motor Company. ©2015 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
RED DEER EXPRESS 9
POLICE BRIEFS MEN ARRESTED AFTER SEARCH WARRANT The arrest of two men by Innisfail RCMP on Aug. 26th led to a search warrant involving the Priority Crimes Task Force and the seizure of multiple firearms from a vehicle and an Innisfail residence. The investigation began on Aug. 26th shortly before 2:30 a.m. when Innisfail RCMP initiated a check on a suspicious vehicle. Police took a male driver and male passenger into custody without incident and seized a loaded shotgun and ammunition that were in the vehicle; both men were on court ordered firearms prohibitions at the time of their arrest. RCMP further seized a number of firearms and ammunition from the vehicle under the authority of a search warrant. Those arrests led to the involvement of the Priority Crimes Task Force in a further investigation, which resulted in a search warrant being executed at a residence on 38th St. Cresc. in Innisfail the morning of Aug. 26th. During this search, RCMP seized one SKS rifle, brass knuckles and ammunition. Brandon Jonathan Mulrooney, 21, of Innisfail has been charged with six counts of possession of a loaded weapon in a vehicle, seven counts of possession of a weapon contrary to prohibition, possession of a firearm without a license, two counts of possession of a firearm contrary to prohibition and possession of a controlled substance. Vincent Luigino Vanin, 25, of Innisfail has been charged with six counts of possession of a loaded weapon in a vehicle and eight counts of breach of recognizance.
RCMP INVESTIGATING SUSPICIOUS MALE Just before 7 a.m. Sept. 3rd, RCMP received a complaint of a suspicious male trying to get into a residence window in the Riverside Meadows area. The RCMP were unable to locate this suspicious male. The incident involved a male who removed a screen on a ground floor bedroom window and was knocking
on the window. He left when a resident in the home told him to leave. He is described as dark skinned and wearing a black toque. On July 23rd a similar incident was reported where a male had opened an unlocked bedroom window at a basement residence in Riverside Meadows. He did not enter the residence but spoke some words to the resident who was in the bedroom. He left when told to leave. No physical description was obtained although he is described as having an accent. The RCMP cannot confirm that these incidents are related. They are currently under investigation. In neither incident did the suspicious male enter the bedroom, nor was anyone injured. Home owners are reminded to be diligent about securing windows; particularly ground floor windows. Motion detector lights and minimal shrubbery around windows are recommended. If you see any activity or persons that seem suspicious, report it immediately via 911. Anyone with information about this investigation is asked to call the Red Deer RCMP at 403-343-5575 or at Crime Stoppers at 1-800-2228477.
MAN ARRESTED AFTER HOSPITAL LOCK DOWN Red Deer RCMP took a man into custody without incident after he allegedly uttered threats that resulted in the Red Deer Regional Hospital going into lock down for almost an hour last night. RCMP responded to a report at 8 p.m. on Aug. 31st that threats had been uttered toward the hospital and its staff. The suspect had attended the hospital then left again without receiving treatment, and a threat was subsequently phoned in to the hospital. The hospital staff locked down the hospital and called RCMP, who attended the hospital to contain the area and search for the suspect. At the same time, more RCMP officers were deployed to the suspect’s Kentwood residence, where he was located at approximately 8:40 p.m. The suspect was cooperative with police and was taken
by Erin Fawcett into custody without incident. The lockdown was lifted immediately and the hospital resumed their normal work. During the lockdown, patient services inside the hospital were not interrupted. No one was injured in this incident and RCMP did not locate any weapons at the suspect’s residence. The 22-year-old Red Deer man will face a charge of uttering threats and will un-
dergo a mental health assessment. RCMP are not releasing his name at this time as charges have not been sworn before the courts.
MORE TAX PHONE SCAMS Red Deer RCMP have received reports from Red Deerians who have received phone messages from scammers claiming to be calling from Canada Revenue Agency. In a
new variation on an old scam, many of the calls are now pre-recorded automated messages claiming that the person they have contacted owes money in taxes and leaving a call back number. As with any call a citizen receives requesting money, Red Deer RCMP urge citizens to independently verify the claims of any caller by hanging up, looking up the phone number for Canada Revenue Agency
(or whichever organization the caller claims to represent) and calling them directly. Do not call back to a number given out by the person calling you. Though scammers may use ‘number spoofing’ to make it look like they’re calling from a local phone number or the number of a business or agency, the scammers are usually located outside of Canada, making it impossible for RCMP to locate them.
“How to Get Rid of Your Back & Neck Pain for Good!” Dear Friend and Fellow Back and Neck Pain Sufferer:
I
What about YOU? What would you do and enjoy if your pain was gone and you could move and play? I can guarantee your life would be better than it is now!
Imagine what your life could be like WITHOUT back and neck pain. You could get your old life back. You could enjoy life again.
“Pain Gone! At Last, Here is the Natural Solution to Ridding Yourself of Back and Neck Pain Forever!” You suffer and have repeatedly seen doctors in the past few days, weeks and months because of your constant pain. If you have, you’ve likely received this advice: pain drugs or physiotherapy or…both. If those two don’t help, you are then told: “You’ll have to learn to live with your pain or have surgery.” I don’t know about you . . . but neither of these options sound appealing to me. You’ve been to your chiropractor. They did everything they could. You’ve had acupuncture. Nothing has helped. What are YOU supposed to do? Just suffer? The thought of a lifetime of pain and limitation is depressing. Your joy has been sucked out of you. You can’t enjoy your life. In fact, it’s hard to get around the house. Even the basics are a chore. What if there was another way? What if there was a non-surgical, painless in-office and cheap way to get quick relief as well as long term freedom from pain, suffering and loss of mobility? There is another way. Keep reading!
“Imagine…You Free from Back and Neck Pain!” You are frustrated and desperate. Frustrated by the fact no one is paying attention to the cause of your problem. Only Band-Aid suggestions: rest, pain killers, anti-inflammatories, physiotherapy, adjustments and needles. YOU are desperate to find someone who can help get rid of your misery caused by bulging, herniated discs or arthritis causing spinal stenosis.
“Announcing! The New Way to Get Rid of Back and Neck Pain!” New breakthrough medical discoveries and technologies get to the root cause of your back and neck pain. If you suffer with bulging or herniated discs, spine arthritis, stenosis, even failed back or neck surgeries, YOU have a brand new chance to find help and relief.
“E i i “Eliminates Back & Neck Pain For Good!” Your pain could be gone for good. People, just like you are reporting their pain is gone. They are able to reduce and sometimes eliminate their pain drugs. They are able to enjoy their lives again. Imagine, climbing up and down the stair, going for walks, playing with the kids or grandkids. . . WITHOUT pain and WITHOUT limitations! What would you be able to enjoy if your back and neck pain were gone? I can tell you one thing. You’d enjoy your life again and you’d have a lot more fun. New computerized technologies gently release pressure on delicate discs and nerves. In addition, state-ofthe-art healing lasers and whole body vibration and…science based alternative medicines, make you feel better and move better. “When Doctors Suffer from Back and Neck Pain – This is What They do!” Many doctors treat themselves with these new medical breakthroughs before considering surgery. How do I know? I know because I’m one of them. You see, four years ago, I herniated a disc in my back. I am now pain FREE and able to walk, work, golf, putter in the garden and even ride my motorcycle. I can even get down on the floor and play with my grandson.
Many are suffering needlessly. Back and neck pain are ruining their lives. They have given up hope or have been told: “There is no hope.” Maybe you are one of them. I want you to know: “You have options. There is hope!” FREE consultation reveals. . . “The Non-Surgical, Painless, Medical Breakthrough Which Eliminates YOUR Back and Neck Pain and Gives Your Old Life Back!” In fact, call by September 20, 2016 and mention you read this article, and in addition, YOU will receive an “Eliminates YOUR Back and Neck Pain!” examination for only $47! (a $97.00 value). Offer expires September 20, 2016. Call Now at (403) 986-7070.
Dr. Steve Waddell D.C. Clinical Director Wellness Coach® Clinics
P.S. Where will you be 30 days from now, if you choose not to claim one of the FREE “Eliminates YOUR Back and Neck Pain!” consultations by September 20, 2016. You’ll probably still be suffering from back and neck pain and miserable . . . when there’s no need to be. YOU owe it to yourself to discover how this non-surgical, painless, medical breakthrough, eliminates your back and neck pain for good. Call(403) 986-7070, NOW to claim your FREE “Eliminates YOUR Back and Neck Pain” consultation. In fact, call by September 20, 2016, mention you read this article, and in addition, you will receive an “Eliminates YOUR Back and Neck Pain!” examination for only $47! (a $97.00 value). P.P.S. “I now have no pain in my back or legs. I am able to move and sit in complete comfort!” Scott Caron, Red Deer, Alberta “Feel 99% Better!” Mervin Meyers, Red Deer, Alberta “I’m relieved I don’t need surgery! I’m now playing with my grandchildren and enjoying my sewing again!” Lynne Reid, Ponoka, Alberta ©MMXV, Wellness Coach ® Inc. All Rights Reserved
10 RED DEER EXPRESS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
New model for more flexible, coordinated housing COMMITTEES OF THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF ALBERTA
Have your say on legislation that helps vulnerable children and youth 16091LL0
The Standing Committee on Legislative Offices invites your thoughts on the Child and Youth Advocate Act. The Act enables the Advocate to represent the interests of children and youth in difficult situations. Submit online by Friday, October 14, 2016 at assembly.ab.ca/committees/legislativeoffices CYAAReview@assembly.ab.ca 780.644.8621 (Call toll-free by dialing 310.0000) Submissions from members of the public will remain confidential upon request; otherwise, they will be made public with the names of submitters and all third-party personal information removed.
assembly.ab.ca/committees/legislativeof fices
The Red Deer Express wants to cover your sporting events.
The City of Red Deer and the Province’s Ministry of Seniors and Housing and Ministry of Human Services will collaborate with other local stakeholders to develop a new integrated housing delivery model, bringing together community housing infrastructure and support services into a combined system. A two-day working meeting is being held in Red Deer Sept. 19th-20th where all parties will create a governance and leadership structure to set the groundwork for an integrated housing delivery model to coordinate local housing support services with non-market housing inventory. Developing a governance and leadership structure was identified as the number one goal in Red Deer’s Five Year Plan to End Homelessness. “We continue to advance our plan to end homelessness as well as ensure safe, accessible and affordable housing is available to all,” said Mayor Tara Veer. “Coordinating both local housing infrastructure and support services helps Red Deerians access and maintain the housing and services most appropriate to them.” The City, with representatives from the Government of Canada, the Province, Red Deer’s two housing delivery bodies: Red Deer Housing Authority and Piper Creek Foundation, local partners in the delivery of Housing First programming for the homeless, the Aboriginal community, local service providers and the busi-
ness community will comprise a working group tasked with developing the new integrated housing governance and leadership structure. “I support this community-driven initiative that will help deliver better outcomes for Red Deer residents,” said Lori Sigurdson, minister of Seniors and Housing. “I look forward to hearing the results of the working session.” Coordinating local agencies that manage and/or deliver housing or support services will strengthen the system, provide more flexibility for housing infrastructure to expand or respond to changing needs, allow for more short and long term planning, and provide more stability for clients and providers, officials say. “The City, in partnership with the Province and our community, has for many years identified the need to address housing and service gaps in Red Deer, both now and in preparation for the future. Today’s announcement means we are gaining traction on a longstanding community challenge,” said Veer. “An integrated approach supports and builds on the work our community service providers already do, and helps us better serve and respond to the broad needs of Red Deerians with compassion and accountability.” A report on the recommendations for a new model is expected later this fall. - Weber
Please call our sports writer
Zachary Cormier at
403-848-4540
or email zcormier@reddeerexpress.com We’d like to cover your events or profile local athletes, so please stay in touch.
www.reddeerexpress.com
RUNNING STEADY - Ed ‘Fast Eddy’ Dostaler has committed to running a round-trip across Canada that began on March 1st, 2015 to raise awareness of both Alzheimer’s Disease and breast cancer. He ran through the City earlier this week. Kalisha Mendonsa/Red Deer Express
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
RED DEER EXPRESS 11
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12 RED DEER EXPRESS
Celebrate the 50th anniversary of International Literacy Day on Sept. 8th at the Red Deer Public Library. Come join us for an evening filled with activities to promote literacy. Event takes place from 6:30-8 p.m. at the downtown branch. MAGnificent Saturdays at the Red Deer Museum + Art Gallery from 1 - 4 p.m. Drop-in art making for the entire family in the Discovery Studio at the MAG. We supply the artist, the inspiration and the materials, you supply your imagination. Included with admission. Participants, please come to the Museum Front Desk to pay or show your membership and you will received your participation sticker! For more details, contact us at 403-309-8405; email museum@reddeer.ca, or visit our web site at www.reddeermuseum.com. Also, MAGsparks runs Monday and Wednesday from 1 to 3 p.m. It’s an arts program connecting people with developmental disabilities to the Red Deer arts community. Visit www.reddeermuseum. com for more information. IA Business Women’s Luncheon featuring guest speaker Kim Berube on topic of ‘Being Proactive in Tough Times’ will take place Sept. 8th from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at 37424, 125 Leva Ave. Networking time allocated. Please pre-register on the web site and pay cash or cheque at the door. $25 for IA members; $28 for guests. Check out www.independentachievers.com. All women welcome! The Red Deer Scottish Country Dancers will host a Ceilidh, a fun music and dance party, at the Pidherney Curling Centre (4725 43 St.) from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. on Sept. 9th. Listen to bagpipes, try some Scottish country dancing or just enjoy lively music. Admission is $5 per person and anyone under the age of 12 gets in free. Cash bar will be on site. Call Lily at
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
403-343-0975 or Carolyn at 403885-9775 for more information. Central Alberta Historical annual general meeting and dinner will take place on Sept. 21st at the Pioneer’s Lodge (4324 46A Ave.) Doors open at 5:30 p.m. followed by dinner and the program at 6 p.m. Guest speaker is Dr. Stephane Guevremont, historian. He will be speaking on the 1916 Canadian experience in WW1. Cost is
8 p.m. Refreshments served. FLK Taoist Tai Chi Awareness Day Open House - connect body and mind and experience the health benefits of Tai Chi. Join us for our Fall Open House on Sept. 10th at our Red Deer Branch (in Safeway Parking lot behind Scotia Bank) from 1-3 p.m. Wear comfortable clothing and bring your inside shoes and play Tai Chi with us. Fung Loy Kok Taoist Tai Chi ™ is a volunteer charitable
tion? Text 403-872-1958. Email desiree@hearinreddeer.ca. Phone 403-356-1598. Tell a friend! Bring a friend! Everyone is welcome! Round out your golf season with the MS Golf Classic. It’s not too late to register and play for your chance at $50,000 in cash prizes and more! Hosted at the exclusive Red Deer Golf & Country Club, golfers have the option to register for free with the commitment to fundraise a minimum
If you are reading this, so are your potential customers. This valuable space is now available – call the Red Deer Express today!
403-346-3356 $27 for members and $30 for non-members. Tickets available at the Museum beginning on Sept. 1st. For further information contact Shelia at 403-347-7873. Join the Ladies’ Auxiliary’s annual Rock’ n Roll Dance Party on Sept. 16th at the Red Deer Legion Branch #35. Event takes place at 8 p.m. and tickets are $15 (includes a hot dog and popcorn). Come dance to Triple Nickel. Annual Turkey supper at Blackfalds United Church will be held on Sept. 25th. Two sittings – 5 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. and advance tickets are recommended as this event normally sells out. Prices are $15 for adults, $7 for kids and under five and free. Please contact Bev at 403-8854861 for more information or tickets. Please leave a message, calls will be returned. Red Deer Arts Council and Red Deer Public Library are pleased to present Geospaces: Acrylic Paintings by Susan Delaney, which runs in the Kiwanis Gallery to Oct. 16th. Our First Friday Red Deer is Sept. 2nd with artist in attendance from 6 to
organization located at 441950th Ave. (behind Scotia Bank in the Port-o’ Call Safeway parking area) in downtown Red Deer. Call 403-346-6772 or visit us at www.taoist.org. Beginner classes start the week of Sept. 12th. Daytime - Mondays/Fridays - 11 a.m. - noon; Tuesdays/Thursdays 9:30 - 10:30 a.m. and evenings Mondays/Wednesdays 6-7 p.m. and Tuesdays 6:30-8:30 p.m. Eckville Country Gospel Weekend runs Sept. 9th-11th at the Eckville Community Centre. RV camping is available, free dry camping is also available. Friday night hours are 5:30 to 9 p.m.; Saturday from 1 to 9:30 p.m. and Sunday from 10:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. with a Sunday service from 9 to 10 a.m. Admission is $20 per day or $35 for the weekend. For more information, call 403-391-1397. Check out www.VisionsCountryGospel. com or find them on facebook. Hearing Loss Support Group Sunday, Sept. 18th: Tinnitus (ringing in the ears). From 2-3:30 p.m. at 2300 Danielle Drive, Red Deer. Bring your own beverage and indoor shoes. Need more informa-
of $300. Make a difference in the lives of those in Central Alberta living with Multiple Sclerosis. Alberta has the largest occurrence of MS in the world and we hope you will join us in the fight to end MS. Why not join us and register to TEE UP Monday Sept. 12th? Go online at www.msgolf. ca. Did you know Canadians have one of the highest rates of multiple sclerosis in the world and that MS is the most common neurological disease affecting young adults in Canada. Hearing Loss Support Group! Please join us as we discuss the highs, lows and laughs of living with hearing loss, hearing aids, gadgets and more. We meet the third Sunday of the month from 1:30 - 3:30 p.m. at 2300 Danielle Drive, Red Deer. Bring your own beverage and indoor shoes. Tell a friend! Bring a friend! $2.00 dropin fee. Need more info? Text 403-872-1958. Email: desiree@ hearinreddeer.ca. Phone 403356-1598. Everyone is welcome. The Senior Citizens Downtown House has fun contact bridge
runs every Wednesday at 1 p.m. Cost is $3.50. Whist is every Friday at 1:30 p.m. Cost is $4. There are only 35 tickets left for Red Deer Hospice’s Sunreal Sunflower Ladies’ HandBAG Lunch on Sept. 21st. This popular event at the Sheraton Hotel features a delicious three-course lunch, entertainment, and the opportunity to bid on 25 designer handbags. Each table will feature a new designer handbag as a center piece and luncheon guests will have the opportunity to bid on the bags in a sealed auction format. Bids will be not be visible to other guests and at the end of the luncheon the highest bidder on each bag will take it home. Tickets are just $45 and the luncheon runs from noon - 2 p.m. to easily fit into the business day! Tickets are available online at www.reddeerhospice.com or call Lori Dufresne at 403-309-4344 to purchase tickets or donate a handbag. The Ladies of Sunnybrook Farm Museum are presenting their annual Lunch at the Farm events between 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. on alternating Wednesdays Sept. 14th. Guests can relax in their 1889 Hanna Log House and enjoy a served lunch, including homemade pie with ice cream and musical entertainment. The afternoon features a guided wagon ride showcasing the history of Sunnybrook Farm Museum. Cost is only $12. Drop ins are welcome, but larger groups are encouraged to reserve a seat by calling 403-340-3511. Dickson Store Museum is celebrating its 25th Anniversary! Come check out our new exhibit entitled ‘Becoming a Museum: Then and Now’. For more details, call 403-728-3355 or check the web site at www.dicksonstoremuseum.com or their facebook page. The Central Alberta Brain Injury Society is seeking volunteer board members to assist with the direction of our organization. If you are interested in joining our team, call Lorraine at 403-3413463 or email at cabis@telus.net. The Red Deer Horseshoe Club plays at the Golden Circle Tuesdays and Thursdays at 6 p.m. For more information, call 403-396-1803.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
RED DEER EXPRESS 13
www.laebon.com
Week of September 7 - 14, 2016 Come and hike with the Red Deer Area Hikers. Gather at 8:45 a.m.; leave for hike at 9 a.m. from the Golden Circle parking lot. For more information about meetings and the group in general, call Mavis at 403-3430091 or Sharon at 403-340-2497. Central Alberta Singles Club is sponsoring a dance Sept. 24th with Leo Dumont, Oct. 29th with Randy Hillman, Nov. 26th with Flashback Freddie and Dec. 17th with Randy Hillman. Everyone is welcome. Dances take place at the Innisfail Royal Canadian Legion. Call Elaine at 403-3417653 or Bob at 403-304-7440. Canadian Diabetes Association hosts Lace Up with Team Diabetes in Red Deer! The Family Fun Run/Walk 3km or 5 km takes place Sept. 10th from 6 to 10 p.m. at McKenzie Trails in Red Deer. Cost - $20 to register. For more information or to register, visit: www.diabetes.ca/ LaceUpRD. Join us this September at McKenzie Trails for our annual family fun night run/ walk in support of the Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA). You’ll have an opportunity to win prizes, enjoy refreshments and listen to great music. Be sure to also bring a bag or two of gently used clothing to help us fill up the Clothesline truck on-site! Your donations will support the work of the CDA. Daytime Documentaries runs Sept. 14th at 2 p.m. in the Red Deer Public Library, downtown branch, of the Snell Auditorium. This month’s documentary is a portrait of a virtuoso pianist, veteran New Yorker, and true original who gave up a successful concert career to teach music and compose. He shares unforgettable stories from his remarkable life with actor Ethan Hawke. Join us for this enlightening documentary and enjoy light refreshments with us. A discussion facilitated by a staff member will follow the film. Everyone is welcome for this free program. If you need more information, or if you plan to bring a group, please contact Adult Services at 403-346-4576. The Red Deer Arts Council is seeking enthusiastic board and
committee volunteers to lead our organization in making Red Deer a dynamic community that celebrates the arts. The Arts Council promotes and advocates for artists and arts & culture organizations in Red Deer, encouraging and facilitating new networks and professional development to make the arts community stronger and more visible. Board Directors set the
course for the organization and work with staff and the arts and business communities to achieve our goals. We are looking for a variety of skilled individuals to join the team! We are specifically seeking individuals with knowledge of or experience in writing policy, communications, fundraising, and committee or organizational leadership. An interest in the arts and culture scene in Red Deer is a decided asset. For more information, contact Diana at info@reddeerartscouncil.ca or call 403-348-2787. Garden Club meetings are held on the third Thursday of every month except December, July and August. All meetings are held at the Kerry Wood Nature Center 6300 – 45 Ave. Senior Citizens Downtown House whist every Friday at 1:30 p.m. - cost is $3. Whist runs every Friday at 1:30 p.m. Cost is $3. PFLAG - known as Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays, is an international organization that offers help to anyone – parents, families, friends, and straight allies of the lesbian,
gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) community – who is dealing with issues of sexual orientation, gender identity and gender expression. The local PFLAG Canada chapter is designed to support parents/ guardians/caregivers/friends/and loved ones (ages 18 and up) in the lives of sexual and gender minority youth. PFLAG Canada Red Deer Chapter meets on the
first Thursday of each month from 6:30-8:30 in room 2601 at Red Deer College. PFLAG Canada Red Deer Chapter was created to help parents help themselves and family members deal with, understand and accept their sexual and gender minority children. PFLAG is the only grassroots organization that deals with sexual and gender minority issues from a family perspective, providing support, education and resources. The Central Alberta Brain Injury Society is seeking volunteer board members who posses a variety of skills including power point creations, fundraising abilities, leadership, vice president, minute taking, program assistant. If you are interested in joining our organization please call Lorraine at 403-341-3463 or email at cabis@telus.net. Join Jason Steele and other Red Deer comedians at The Hub on Ross Wednesday evenings for a night of family comedy. The Hub is located at 4936 – Ross St. Come early if you want to go on stage and tell a few jokes. All ages and abilities are welcome to watch or
participate. Call 403-340-4869. 69. The Red Deer Celiac Support Group – need help with a gluten-free diet? Do you have Celiac disease or gluten intolerance?We meet the third Tuesday of the month at South Sobeys Coffee Lounge (2011 22 St.) from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Drop in or stay and visit. Free coffee. We share information and give support about issues pertaining to the gluten-free
lifestyle, for example symptoms, diagnosis, shopping, gluten-free products, cross contamination, recipes. Call Clarice at 403-3414351 or Marlene at 403-346-6235. Email reddeerceliacs@yahoo. ca. Check out www.celiac.ca. The Red Deer Legion Pipe Band is actively recruiting experienced and inexperienced people from the Central Alberta area, who are interested in joining the pipe band. Anyone with piping or drumming experience, or if you would like to learn piping or drumming, are asked to please contact us at 403-782-7183. Practices are held at the Red Deer Legion on Tuesdays at 7 p.m. Royal Canadian Air Force Association - the aims and objectives of the Air Force Association are to preserve and perpetuate the glorious traditions of the Royal Canadian Air Force and to advocate a proficient and well equipped Air Force in Canada. 703 Wing in Red Deer provides a forum for serving and former participants in military and civil aviation to meet and enjoy the company of like-minded people. 703 Wing
members b meett att noon every second Saturday of the month at the ABC Country Restaurant 2085 50th Ave in Red Deer for a luncheon and business meeting. For more information contact Al Low at 403-341-3253. Red Deer Action Group Society is seeking volunteer board members. In order to keep our programs running, we need board members willing to commit two hours per month. If you think this would be a good opportunity, contact our office at 403-3431198 or email rdag@telus.net. If you enjoy singing Glee Club style, but feel your skills are limited, please come and join our group of seniors who sing and play for seniors as a gift of community spirit. The Tony Connelly Singers, in their 31st year of service, welcome anyone who might enjoy singing out at seniors’ venues around the City. From September to June we prepare 10, one-hour programs filled with oldies and newer music. We practice form 9:30 to 11 a.m. each Tuesday at the Downtown House Seniors Centre and present four to six sing outs each month. Our group is friendly, social and supportive. Please join our next practice or anytime. Call Shirley at 403-342-5904 for bookings or Betty at 403-3467316 for more information. Dance for the health of it – try it out – first lesson is free. It runs Mondays and Wednesdays. Sessions run from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. for 10 weeks. $120/ week. Sessions will be held at the Clearview Community Centre (93 Cornett Dr.) Call Connie at 403-396-1523 or email teamdance123@gmail.com. Ladies Auxiliary meetings are held first Monday of every month at 7 p.m., Red Deer Branch #35, Alberta room. Parkinson Alberta Education and Support Groups Parkinson Alberta offers groups for persons with Parkinson Disease, family members & caregivers at the following Central Alberta locations: Red Deer, Lacombe, Innisfail, Olds, Three Hills & Castor. Information 403-3464463. www.parkinsonalberta.ca.
14 RED DEER EXPRESS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
RED DEER EXPRESS 15
Two local teachers honoured nationally BY KALISHA MENDONSA RED DEER EXPRESS Two local teachers were recently recognized for their outstanding efforts in education through the Canadian Family Teacher Awards. Amy Nye of École Barrie Wilson and Karen Sveinson of École Central Intermédiaire were each awarded $2,500 for their respective schools. Nye was nominated for her innovative and individually-tailored methods that greatly inspire her students by focusing on critical thinking, problem solving, and collaboration. Nye has also integrated practices from her training in meditation and mindfulness to help students overcome anger, anxiety and emotional stress. Sveinson was recognized for creating and supporting school programs that promote empathy, equity, kindness and inclusion in her students. As well, Sveinson empowers positive change through anti-bullying initiatives, sex and gender diversity inclusion, mental health education and foreign aid awareness initiatives. “I believe in teaching kids to think critically, approach problems from various perspectives and seek new solutions,” Nye said. “The more we can do those things, the more we are growing their brains and teaching them to be resilient and cope with whatever the world throws at them. What’s really important to me is that when kids leave here, they know I cared about them and they know they had success. I want them to look back and know they had fun while learning things that were relevant to them. Nye uses her experience in mindfulness practice - physical and emotional awareness - to help children cope with anxiety, stress and develop their creative thinking skills. She says it’s incredibly important to her to remind children their emotions are not permanent and that they are valid in their feelings but to also know they can grow past those moments. Nye was also recognized for her efforts in developing new and exciting methods for children to learn academic and life skills. She continually seeks to broaden her teaching repertoire and looks for out of the box teaching methods for use in her classroom.
AMY NYE
KAREN SVEINSON
She said she was quite humbled by the recognition of the Canadian Family Teacher Award. “All teachers work really, really hard and lots do amazing things. When you do it, you don’t expect ever to win an award or to be recognized for it because it’s just your job. It kind of makes me feel teary. It’s a wonderful feeling and totally unexpected.” Nye will be using her prize money to further develop a MakerSpace creative lab within École Barrie Wilson. Sveinson was recognized for her innovative methods of helping students feel included and valued, as well as pursuing the development of community among the students of École Central Intermédiaire. She is a counsellor at the school and runs a multitude of clubs and programs to keep kids involved. “My proudest moments are when I see growth in students,” she said. “All students have voices and all of them have ideas and things to contribute. My philosophy that I teach my students is, ‘I count, connections count and solutions count’. This helps them to develop problem solving skills, leadership and community among themselves and in the school.” One of Sveinson’s most successful projects is called a SwapNShop, where students are encouraged to trade gen-
tly-used clothing and foster the notion of ‘reduce, reuse and recycle.’ “Donations were solicited from the community with the idea of helping the environment and ensuring gently-used work clothing and sporting goods were reused rather than thrown away. The response from our students and community was overwhelming and we were soon able to provide students in need with the ability to shop through a large selection of clothing and sporting goods, with dignity and while helping the environment.” Sveinson’s community mind guides her program development and she constant-
ly seeks input from students to deliver meaningful programming. She believes in developing students through their own suggestions and fostering their ability to think proactively, creatively and with a greater community goal in mind. She added her sister was a huge inspiration to her in terms of fostering resiliency in students and to follow one’s dreams. “When you offer any kind of club, you equalize things for everyone. I want kids to be healthy and to make healthy choices for themselves. There are so many times kids can be attracted to unhealthy lifestyles and I want to make the school a community of inclusion and support for healthy choices. I know how fast and scary it can be when kids get hooked up with addictions and other negative things, so I’m mindful to be proactive, preventative and get kids involved,” she said. “I love my role. It’s a comprehensive counselling program but kids will remember being connected with others and with their school. That’s what I’m really promoting in this school - friendships and connections with others. I want students to feel like they are a part of this community.” Sveinson said she plans to use the money to buy some books for literacy programs, and for some equipment for after-school programs. As well, she wants to purchase healthy snacks and nutrition for her numerous after school and lunch hour clubs. kmendonsa@reddeerexpress.com
2016-2017 Fundraiser Speaker Series
UP CLOSE - A friendly horse at Heritage Ranch greets passers-by on the trail. Kalisha Mendonsa/Red Deer Express
What Makes that Art?
Go Behind the Scenes!
Writing the Wild
Tuesday, October 4
Tuesday, February 8
Tuesday, April 11
Meet JASON FRIZZELL, Dean, School of Creative Arts, Red Deer College, who will speak about VISUAL ARTS and help us understand abstract and nontraditional art forms.
Welcome Red Deer Director LORI LANE discussing PERFORMING ARTS. Lori will give us a peek into the madness that is Behind the Scenes.
Red Deer College Instructor JENNA BUTLER combines CREATIVE WRITING and the environment for a unique talk on creating prose and poetry with mother nature in mind.
Events run 7 p.m. to 8:15 p.m. at Red Deer Public Library’s Downtown Branch. Tickets are $10 each per program and can be purchased four weeks in advance at the Downtown Branch and also at the door.
16 RED DEER EXPRESS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
RED DEER EXPRESS 17
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18 RED DEER EXPRESS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
Marking the 100th anniversary of the Battle of the Somme One hundred years ago, during the summer and fall of 1916, the immense, gruesome and generally futile Battle of the Somme was fought in Northern France. For a great many, the Somme has become an epic symbol of the incomprehensible horrors of trench warfare during the First World War. The Battle of the Somme commenced on July 1st, 1916 with one of the greatest artillery barrages and frontal assaults in history. More than 1.5 million shells were blasted at the enemy lines. Then hundreds of thousands of British and Allied troops ‘went over the top’ and attacked the highly fortified German trenches, dugouts and bunkers. By every measure, the first day was a disaster. The British forces suffered 57,470 casualties, including 19,240 dead. It remains the worst one day loss of life in the history of the British Army. The Royal Newfoundland Regiment was particularly hard hit. Of the 800 men who went into battle near the village
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DAWE of Beaumont-Hamel, 664 became casualties. When asked why the R.N.R. was not proceeding forward, a senior office replied that ‘dead men can advance no further.’ Despite the phenomenal disaster, the British High Command did not reconsider their plans. That was largely due to a refusal to admit that they had been wrong on such a massive scale. Furthermore, the Somme offensive did not have strategic objectives usually associated with great battles. One of the key goals was to distract the Germans and thereby help relieve the brutal losses the French armies were suffering in their defense of Verdun. Moreover, as the horrific losses mounted, the British High Command
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HARD FOUGHT - Nurses and officers gathered for multiple graveside services at the First Canadian Field Hospital at Etaples, France during the horrific Battle of the Somme, September 1916. Red Deer Archives P5405 touted the idea that since there were more British and Allied soldiers than Germans, they could absorb the incredible loss of life much better than Germany could. In other words, they claimed that in a war of attrition, the Germans would be ‘bled white’ first, thereby causing collapse of the enemy forces from exhaustion. Final ‘victory’ in the war could
thereby be achieved. By the end of summer, the British and Allied Forces were themselves showing serious signs of battle exhaustion. However, instead of calling off the offensive, new troops, including the Canadian Corps, were put into the front lines. The initial Canadian objective was to capture the village of Courcelette and surrounding area.
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Their efforts in early and mid-September resulted in one of the best successes of the Somme offensive. However, those gains were still very limited. The front moved only a few hundred metres. The number of casualties incurred were staggering - an estimated 7,000 men. The Canadians had been bolstered by two innovations of the war. One was the creeping artillery barrage which pounded enemy positions immediately in front of the advancing troops. The other was the introduction of the tank. The tank showed great promise as a weapon of war. However, it was put into battle before many of the technological problems had been ironed out. The tanks frequently broke down. Some literally ran out of gas. Others got bogged down in the mud. Many were taken out by shellfire. Hence, the benefit to the Canadian troops
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proved tragically limited. Soon the Red Deer newspapers were full of the accounts of local men being killed and wounded at the Somme. As the battle dragged on through the fall, nearly 50 young men from Red Deer and area lost their lives and roughly three times that number were wounded. By November, Corporal William Richards, of the local ‘C’ Squadron of 12 Canadian Mounted Rifles, reported that his unit had suffered such severe losses that he was the only surviving non-commissioned officer in his platoon. Finally, on Nov. 19th, 1916, the onset of winter finally brought the Battle of the Somme to an end. The British and Allied forces had suffered more than 1,000,000 casualties, including 24,029 Canadians. The net gain of territory captured was less than 4.5 kms. Most tragically, the Great War was to drag on for another two years.
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
RED DEER EXPRESS 19
Hearts of Harmony welcoming new members
photo submitted
38106 Range Road 275, Red Deer County, AB T4S 2L9
WWW.RDCOUNTY.CA
PUBLIC NOTICE
In conjunction with this proposed amendment to the Land Use Bylaw, Council will also be giving further consideration to the following two bylaws: Bylaw 2016/25 – Prohibited Animals Bylaw with the purpose of banning Wild Boars within Red Deer County; and Bylaw No. 2016/26 – an amendment to the General Penalty Bylaw to include penalties to be applied relative to Bylaw No. 2016/25, Prohibited Animals. Bylaw No. 2016/28 to adopt a Local Area Structure Plan (Gurdwara Guru Nanak Darbar) for a portion (6.37 hectares / 15.76 acres) of E PT SE 20-37-27-4 to facilitate the subdivision of a 1.21-hectare (3-acre) parcel. 6(
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Bower Dental General Dentists
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The hearings will be informal and persons wishing to speak will be requested to state their name and address for the record upon being recognized by the Chair. If you prefer to submit comments on the bylaws in writing, the information you provide may be made public, subject to the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act. The public may inspect: - a copy of the bylaws - a copy of LAND USE BYLAW No. 2006/6 - a copy of the Local Area Structure Plan by visiting our website at www.rdcounty.ca or at the County office located at 38106 Rge Rd 275, Red Deer County, Alberta, during regular office hours 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. MONDAY through FRIDAY.
MUNICIPAL PLANNING COMMISSION DECISIONS
Permitted Use EAST of RED DEER 1. F. Ruether – 20.7-metre (68’) front yard setback relaxation for the location of an accessory building (shop) on Lot 1, Plan 782-0308, NE 7-38-25-4.
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County Council will hear from any person claiming to be affected by the proposed bylaws at the Public Hearing on Tuesday, September 20, 2016, at 1:30 p.m., in Council Chambers, County Office, 38106 Rge Rd 275, Red Deer County, Alberta (west of Hwy 2 on 32 Street / C&E Trail Overpass).
On the 6th day of September, 2016, under provisions of the Land Use Bylaw 2006/6, Red Deer County Municipal Planning Commission issued decisions approving the following applications:
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Looking ahead, MacGregor said the plan for next year is to do something to honour Canada’s 150th birthday. “We have tentative plans to sing at Bower Ponds in July and then to hopefully do a show in September,� she said. Meanwhile, MacGregor said she encourages those interested to come and check the group out at one of their practices. “Anyone who loves to sing, especially harmony, will love this chorus,� she said. “We are a precision choir and we strive to make beautiful music for our audiences. There is a great pleasure in being able to bring music to other people and to do it in a way that you know is pleasing.� For more information, call Yvonne Bauer at 403986-1034 or Sheryl Brook at 403-742-4218. Also, visit www.heartsofharmony.ca
Bylaw No. 2016/27 to amend paragraph b) of the definition of “Agricultural Operation� in Section 10, Interpretive Definitions, of the Land Use Bylaw to read as follows: “the raising of livestock, including gameproduction animals within the meaning of the Livestock Industry Diversion Act, and poultry, with the exception that raising of wild boars is prohibited.�
²
SANDY MACGREGOR
NOTICE is hereby given that at its meeting to be held on TUESDAY, September 20, 2016, the Council of Red Deer County will consider the following bylaws:
²
“THERE IS A GREAT PLEASURE IN BEING ABLE TO BRING MUSIC TO OTHER PEOPLE AND TO DO IT IN A WAY THAT YOU KNOW IS PLEASING.�
Ph: 403-350-2150 Fx: 403-346-9840
A great place to live, work & grow
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If you love to sing, want to meet a great group of women and just have fun, members of one local choir encourage new members to join. During the month of September, the Hearts of Harmony choir, is encouraging new potential members to come and check them out. There are 36 members in the choir who range in age from their late 20s to mid-80s. “We are a group of women who love to sing. We sing four part harmony a cappella,� said Sandy MacGregor, marketing coordinator and member of Hearts of Harmony. “We are part of Sweet Adelines International - the ladies’ barbershop - and we started in 1993 with six people. “We have an awesome director, Sheryl Brook, and she comes from Stettler to direct us. Our members come from Innisfail, Sundre, Carstairs and there is even a member who comes from Calgary.� Practices take place on Mondays from 7 - 9:30 p.m. at the Davenport Church in Red Deer. Those interested in joining the group must make the commitment to attend weekly practices. “It’s a demanding chorus in that you have to memorize the pieces and you can’t have music. It’s a pretty top notch kind of choir,� said MacGregor, who has been part of the group for three years. There is also a cost to join - about $250 annually - which pays for a membership with the Sweet Adelines International, performance wear and music. Throughout the year, Hearts of Harmony performs in various ven-
ues including at nursing homes, hospitals, festivals, Christmas shows, private functions and much more. “Every other year we go to the Sweet Adeline competition and we compete regionally, not so much to win but to improve our performance,� said MacGregor.
Members of the Hearts of Harmony an a cappella choir are encouraging new members to join.
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BY ERIN FAWCETT RED DEER EXPRESS
BEAUTIFUL MUSIC
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The purpose of this bylaw is to facilitate the subdivision of the parcel to allow for the construction of a Community Facility (Sikh Temple). This property is located approximately 2.5Â miles south of the City of Red Deer on the east side of Hwy 2, north of Twp Rd 373.
NORTH of RED DEER 2. Performance Energy Services for Core Laboratories Canada Ltd. – 4.2-metre (14’) side yard setback relaxation for the location of an accessory building (temporary tent structure) on Lot 1, Blk 1, Plan 8122990, SE 14-39-27-4 (Blindman Industrial Park). Discretionary Use SOUTH of GLENIFFER RESERVOIR 3. J. Oszli – renewal of a Campground Minor and for a 52-metre (172’) relaxation to the minimum distance to a multi-lot subdivision for a Recreational Vehicle Storage Minor to allow the RVs to stay on site throughout the winter. A person may appeal a Discretionary Use approval prior to 4:30 p.m. on September 21, 2016, by paying the required appeal fee and by filing an appeal in writing against the decision with the Red Deer County Subdivision and Development Appeal Board, 38106 Rge Rd 275, Red Deer County, Alberta. A Permitted Use approval may not be appealed unless the decision involves a relaxation, variance or misinterpretation of the Land Use Bylaw. For further information, contact Planning & Development Services at 403-350-2170.
20 RED DEER EXPRESS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
CITY BRIEFS LACE UP FOR TEAM DIABETES The Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) is excited to present the annual Lace Up for Team Diabetes run/walk that will take place on Sept. 10th at McKenzie Trails in Red Deer. This family-friendly event will feature a 3 km or 5 km run/walk. “There is no denying the seriousness of diabetes - it’s a complex disease with many causes and no known cure. If you don’t have it, there is a good chance someone in your family or circle of friends is affected. In Alberta, it is estimated 303,000 people are living with diabetes including another 600,000 living with pre-diabetes and many others living with the disease but un-diagnosed. Not only is the number of cases growing, so are the serious complications it causes,” said Jackie Morrison, community engagement coordinator in Red Deer, CDA. “Funds raised from this event will help send children with Type 1 diabetes to camp and fund leading-edge research and innovative educational programs and services in Alberta.” Participants will have the opportunity to win prizes, enjoy refreshments and listen to great music. Registration is $20 and individuals can register at diabetes.ca/LaceUpRD. Residents are also encouraged to bring in a bag or two of reusable clothing to help fill the Clothesline truck on-site. Donations will support the work of the CDA. Sign up to volunteer at Lace Up for Team Diabetes in Red Deer by emailing jackie.morrison@diabetes.ca.
INSTRUMENT DRIVE CONTINUES The BIG Musical Instrument DRIVE has seen great support from our community providing musical instruments for students who otherwise may not be able to participate in band programs. During the month of August, 25 musical instruments were donated to the Foundation for Red Deer Public Schools and will be redistributed to music programs and students across the district. Instruments were dropped off at Red Deer Fire Stations. The District’s partners at 53rd Street Music will take a careful look at the in-
struments, provide an appraisal and do the necessary repairs. Donors will receive a charitable tax receipt for the fair market value. “We are grateful with the number of instruments received. Each one of them comes from individuals who understand the value and importance of music education. We will now put these in the hands of students who are excited to be involved in music programs in our schools,” said Bruce Buruma, executive director of the foundation. While the instrument drive will have a huge impact, there is still a need for additional instruments. The District invites the community to drop gently used musical instruments off at any Red Deer Public School during the month of September.
CROSSWALK SIGNALS TO BE INSTALLED Starting this fall a new style of crosswalk signals called Rectangular Rapid Flashing Beacons (RRFBs) will be installed at nine locations in Red Deer to improve pedestrian safety. RRFBs, an alternative to traditional traffic signals, are installed above the side mounted pedestrian crosswalk signs and use dual rectangular LED lights to display intermittent rapid flashes. RRFBs are also significantly more cost effective as compared to traditional overhead crosswalk signals. “Improving road safety is a priority for the City, and installing RRFBs will help to improve safety for all users,” said Wayne Gustafson, Engineering Services manager. “RRFBs are a proven solution for improving pedestrian safety, particularly on wider, higher volume roads.” Starting in September, RRFBs will be installed at the following nine locations including at 40th Ave. and Selkirk Blvd., 35th St. and Spruce Drive, 40th Ave. (in front of Eastview Middle School), 45th St. and 52nd Ave., 49th St. between 46th and 45th Ave. (at Coronation Park crossing), 50th St. between 46th and 45th Ave. (at Coronation Park crossing), 67th St. and 30th Ave. roundabout, the 67th St. and Johnstone/ Orr Dr. roundabout and at Orr Dr. between 66th St. and Ogilvie Close.
Vantage Community Services is a non-proĮt organizaƟon based in Red Deer governed by a volunteer community board of dedicated professionals who bring a wealth of knowledge and experience from various areas of the private sector and human services Įeld. Our wide range of programs and services help youth, adults, and families to Įnd a way through the challenging problems they face. To Įnd out more about Vantage Community Services, visit our website www.vantagecommunityservices.ca We are looking for Volunteer Board members to join our organizaƟon and contribute to our mission “to build capacity in people by creaƟng opportuniƟes and insƟlling hope and conĮdence.” DuƟes and responsibiliƟes include: • Strong commitment to and demonstrated interest in Vantage Community Services • Reasonable Ɵme availability • Ability to work with and learn from others • Strong interpersonal and communicaƟon skills • Comfortable working with a policy governance model • Experience on or with other boards is an asset • A strong social conscience and desire to contribute to a healthier community Please send your leƩer of interest and resume to hr@vantagecommunityservices.ca OR by fax 403.346.3225
by Mark Weber RDC CELEBRATES PARTNERSHIP Red Deer College was pleased to welcome guests from Trinidad & Tobago last month as RDC connected with the National Energy Skills Centre (NESC) for a contract signing event. The contract signing further enhances the partnership that RDC and NESC have had since 2008, and it will provide greater stability and an improved academic framework to the Trinidad & Tobago-based organization. “We are incredibly pleased to welcome our guests today and to extend our partnership with the NESC in these new and exciting ways,” said Joel Ward, RDC’s president and CEO. “This contract will provide a framework for RDC to offer guidance and technical support that will further enhance the local apprenticeship programs in Trinidad & Tobago, allowing for a consistent approach in the delivery of training across key occupational areas.” The contract is the next evolution in the partnership, and it builds on the five-year Memorandum of Understanding that RDC and NESC signed last year. Among other items, last year’s MoU provides NESC with access to RDC’s world-class curriculum for use in apprenticeship programs. “The pieces of our partnership are building on each other for the benefit of apprenticeship students in Trinidad & Tobago,” said Ward. “And now, for the first time, graduates of the NESC will be able to earn a Red Deer College certificate once they have satisfied the academic, competency and experiential standards required.” The level of training and the certifications that students can earn provide a solid foundation for their futures and for industry in the nation. “Industry in Trinidad & Tobago is comprised primarily of multinational companies operating and competing in the international energy market,” said Kern Dass, president of NESC. “The NESC is entrusted with the responsibility to educate and train this cadre of journeymen, and we are proud to partner with RDC to access and bring to our region the occupational standards set by Alberta.” In addition to the framework set out by this new contract, Dass is also looking forward to applying other learnings from his time in Alberta. “Success within training institutions, as demonstrated by RDC, is the result of consistency in standards and a burning desire at all levels of an organization to improve performance within a set academic framework,” he said. “Having experienced RDC, it has given me a clear platform from which to operate and a vision of where NESC should be in the future.” Both RDC and NESC see great benefits to their partnership and look forward to its continuing evolution. “This partnership is of great significance to our nation’s future,” said Dass. “It provides our citizens with world-class curricula, courseware, teaching methodologies and internationally-recognized certification.”
TRANSIT MAKES CHANGES TO SELECT ROUTES Red Deer Transit has made schedule adjustments to the evening service on several routes and is expanding service to cover weekends and holidays on select routes. Buses on routes one through 11 will have expanded service hours to run from 6:15 a.m.
with a final departure from Sorensen Station at 11:15 p.m. The following routes have had minor route and schedule changes - Route 5, serving Rosedale and Deer Park; Route 6, serving Clearview, Clearview Ridge and Timberlands and Route 3, serving Red Deer College and Anders. Transit is also expanding days of service on Route 6, serving Clearview Ridge and Timberlands areas to run regularly Monday through Sunday, as well as during statutory holidays. Route 12/12A with service to Gasoline Alley and Springbrook is also expanding service to cover statutory holidays which started on Sept. 5th. This route is funded by Red Deer County. Transit riders are reminded that there is no service on Easter Sunday, Christmas Day and New Year’s Day. Updated schedules are available at www. reddeer.ca/transit. Printed versions of the new schedules are available at the Transit Customer Service Centre at Sorenson Station and at City Hall. For more information, please contact Transit by phone at 403-342-8225 or by email at transit@reddeer.ca. Transit Customer Service is open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday to Friday.
RDC ANNOUNCES NEW STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING COACH Red Deer College has announced Jason MacDonald will join the coaching staff, filling the newly created position of strength and conditioning coach in RDC Athletics. “We are excited to have Jason join our team, as he brings a great deal of knowledge and passion to the position,” said Diane St-Denis, athletic director. “His experience as a professional and intercollegiate athlete will prove to be an asset to our program.” MacDonald’s resume includes 15 years as a strength and conditioning coach, as well as experiences being a former professional and ACAC athlete, and he is looking forward to connecting with RDC’s student-athletes in his new role. “I’m extremely excited about the opportunity to work with student-athletes, helping them to become better players and helping to set them up with skills and habits that will serve them throughout their lives,” he said. RDC Athletics created the new position to enhance the opportunities for training and education for student athletes. MacDonald, who played volleyball for Mount Royal University and was named the ACAC All Conference Player of the Year in 1995-96, will draw on his own collegiate experience and his certification as a CrossFit trainer to help student athletes grow. “Throughout my time in athletics, I’ve gone from being a student-athlete to a professional athlete – while maintaining a full-time career – to opening my own business and teaching others about strength and conditioning,” he said. “I understand that it can be a struggle to maintain fitness and nutritional goals with all of the other time conflicts and challenges that life brings. I hope to set a good example for our student-athletes to show them that it can be done and that it can have positive lifelong impacts.”
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
RED DEER EXPRESS 21
ENTERTAINMENT Scenic Route to Alaska coming to Bo’s this fall BY MARK WEBER RED DEER EXPRESS Edmonton-based indie rock trio Scenic Route to Alaska are heading to Red Deer this fall on the heels of their latest release Long Walk Home. The 2015 Edmonton Music Awards ‘Group of the Year’ plays Bo’s on Oct. 14th. Long Walk Home, the prairie indie outfit’s third LP, finds Trevor Mann (lead vocals/ guitar), Shea Connor (drums) and Murray Wood (bass) weaving catchy vocals and memorable melodies through relatively rich arrangements – instantly engaging but begging to be heard again and again. “We’re lucky that all three of us grew up together and played music together - we go back,” said Mann with a laugh. “I met Murray when I was about five years old - we lived in the same community and went to the same elementary school. I think by the time we were seven, we were best friends. “When I was about 11 years old, Shea moved to the community Murray and I lived in which is Riverdale in Edmonton, and he was invited to Murray’s birthday party - so that’s how I met him. All of a sudden the three of us just became really good friends, and we started jamming - making funny tunes, playing in an old four-piece band and at sock hops playing a lot of R&B covers and Beatles-inspired stuff,” he recalls. For Mann, he was in his late teens by the time he began writing his own tunes. “Murray and Shea helped in that process for sure, and there was such a comfortable sense in being with those two guys.” Time went by and the three just continued to gel as a band - and today they are full-time musicians. And enjoying every minute of it. Indeed. Their collaboration has been described as a, “Coveted combination within the crowded
EMERGING - Scenic Route to Alaska are heading to Red Deer this fall on the heels of their latest release Long Walk Home. They perform at Bo’s on Oct. 14th. sphere of indie rock – and one that’s rarely the product of anything but time, talent, and heaps of hard work.” The friends formed Scenic Route to Alaska in 2010. Their early releases – a self-titled 2011 EP and 2012 full-length All These Years – belied the youth of the band and its members, owing to their and years of making music together and brotherly bond. The attention and accolades poured in and earned them performances at prestigious events like the Edmonton and Canmore Folk Festivals and CMW. They propelled themselves to an even higher peak with 2014’s Warrington, earning rave reviews
photo submitted
in addition to shows alongside contemporaries like Hey Rosetta!, Said the Whale, and Born Ruffians. They also landed a WCMA nod for Pop Recording of the Year and were finalists in the inaugural edition of Alberta’s Peak Performance Project. As for the vision for Long Walk Home, Mann said the goal was essentially to capture what the guys drum up in a live show but also to spice up the sound for the best, most polished project to date. Of course, the heart and soul of what makes Scenic Route to Alaska the band they are remains absolutely intact. Lyrically, Mann writes the bulk of the songs for the band with
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collaboration with the other guys, too. “For the most part we collaborate on a song - I’ll bring a very rough ‘skeleton’ of a song on guitar or something. And we’ll pick up some other instruments and just hash it out until we feel like we’ve found what we were going for.” A love for music in Mann’s life came early, but there was another career that he had high hopes for during those early years as well. “Like every other Canadian kid out there, I wanted to be in the NHL,” he laughs. “But once we gave up on those dreams and we all decided we wanted to make music, we wanted to figure out what we had to do to make that possible and building a sus-
Ba Band Ban B an a and n nd d
tainable career out of it. “It’s definitely where my heart is - 100 per cent. It’s not that there aren’t other things I like doing, but if I can continue to keep paying the bills this way, then I’m laughing.” Both his parents were folk musicians, so there was certainly loads of music heard on any given day. “They had separated, but only lived a block from each other and got along really well. My dad would play five nights a week in grungy bars, so he’s extremely happy that I’ve managed to have my own songs and get up there and present my own stuff a bit more. It’s really cool. “Sometimes they were too supportive,” he adds, chuckling, noting that if there was a choice between finishing an essay or taking a gig, his parents would often encourage him to snap up the gig. “They wouldn’t force me to finish the essay. “When I’d go to bed at night, he’d always sit down at the kitchen table singing away - it was a great way to fall asleep.” Meanwhile, on stage, Scenic Route to Alaska’s energy is palpable and the fun contagious. Always locked in with a syncopation that can only stem from a long collective history, the band bounces from ballads to bangers with ease, leaving a lasting impression on any kind of audience in front of them. That said, Mann said he still gets the jitters prior to hitting the stage - even though he loves it. “I think I’ve just learned how to turn that more into adrenaline, and energy and a passion it’s about harnessing the power, harness the fear - it’s the only way to deal with it.” The band will head over to Berlin, Hamburg and Amsterdam in September to play a couple of showcases supporting their release including Reeperbahn Festival before kicking off their Canadian run on Sept. 30th in Fernie, B.C. editor@reddeerexpress.com
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
ENTERTAINMENT
Treehouse’s Toopy and Binoo return to Red Deer BY ERIN FAWCETT RED DEER EXPRESS On the heels of two highly successful national tours, BFFs Toopy and Binoo have announced a return to the live stage for an all new 50-city national tour, including Red Deer’s Memorial Centre on Sept. 26th. Sunwing.ca presents ‘Toopy and Binoo: Fun and Games’, their wackiest and most interactive adventure yet. The dynamic duo plus the energetic boot stomping Dusteroos and limbo-loving sheep begin their new quest to find the best game ever. “Audiences are wild for this flamboyant production where imaginations remain untamed. Toopy and Binoo are the epitome of uninhibited fun,” said Patti Caplette, an award-winning choreographer who is also writer and director of multiple Koba Entertainment productions including Toopy and Binoo. “The cast and I are getting our funny bones in training for the ingenious silliness of Toopy and Binoo. No wonder audiences love them, it’s non-stop fun and games!” The characters are based on the pair from the animated series for preschoolers based on the books created by Dominique Jolin. Toopy is a funny, friendly, optimistic, impulsive mouse whose zest for life is matched only by his love for his best friend, Binoo. Binoo is a lovable cat who is logical, sensible, and thinks before he acts and he is devoted to his best friend Toopy. As for the latest show, ‘Toopy and Binoo: Fun and Games’, the production integrates music, theatre, dance, puppetry and innovative multimedia technology to create an off the wall experience that will delight the family. Toopy and Binoo blend optimism, imagination and spontaneity in their quest to find the best game ever. The story unfolds when a toy chest full of mismatched games and puzzles ignites the pair’s imagination. “This is such an energetic, wonderful show,” said Caplette, adding there are seven cast members who play 24 roles throughout the show. “It’s really amazingly bright, colourful and beautiful. “Toopy and Binoo are really such wacky characters. Toopy is a giant mouse and he has a stuffy friend called Binoo, who really is the intelligence of the duo. Toopy is the most fun loving, playful character you could ever meet and they love to play games. This whole show is centered around what games they are going to play.”
FRIENDLY FACES - Toopy and Binoo bring their show ‘Toopy and Binoo: Fun and Games’ to the Memorial Centre Sept. 26th. photo submitted The foundation of every show is one of unabashed imagination, she said. “There are no boundaries to the imagination or the fun. And Toopy and Binoo are the quintessential duo who have taken things way beyond the word ‘imagination’. They really break boundaries – it’s a great program.” Audiences will enjoy watching as Toopy and Binoo dance with Xs and Os, wiggle with smiling snakes and try to outsmart a gang of dancing ladders. Along with tea-partying cats, Dusteroos and a flock of fun-loving sheep, Toopy and Binoo indeed embark on their wackiest and most interactive adventure yet. For Caplette, she first discovered her love of performing arts at her mother’s dance studio in Vancouver where by age five she was showing an early knack for choreography and playwriting. Between
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“AUDIENCES ARE WILD FOR THIS FLAMBOYANT PRODUCTION WHERE IMAGINATIONS REMAIN UNTAMED. TOOPY AND BINOO ARE THE EPITOME OF UNINHIBITED FUN.” PATTI CAPLETTE 1973 and 1992 she performed in more than 400 cities in 19 countries including United States, Canada, Russia, Japan, Egypt and Mexico and starred in productions by international choreographers. And after three years with Les Grands Ballets, she joined the Royal Winnipeg Ballet where, over 15 years with the company, she danced in many productions including Peter Wright’s Giselle, John Neumeier’s Nutcracker, Agnes de Milne’s Fall River Legend and Rudi Van Datzig’s Romeo and Juliet. After much success as a dancer, she turned to choreography and was soon creating award-winning work for dance
companies, the opera, the symphony and even the circus. Besides Toopy and Binoo, Koba’s touring shows feature characters from children’s literature and television including The Backyardigans, Franklin the Turtle, Max & Ruby, Doodlebops and Caillou. As for Toopy and Binoo, the characters made their television debut in 2005 and climbed into the hearts of children in hundreds of countries, including Treehouse TV (Canada), Tiji (France), Rai Sat (Italy) and Sun TV (India). Meanwhile, Caplette really couldn’t be in a more fitting line of work. “I work with amazing casts and amazing co-creators,” she said. “My cast is also a wonderful group of performers – they are out on the road, they are troopers and they live to perform. I just love working with that kind of energy. It also keeps me young – I was born into theatre and have been in theatre all my life,” she said. “It’s something I want to bring to families to have as part of their lives, too. And hopefully propagate more theatre-goers, patrons and people who will continue to keep the art of theatre alive.” For ticket information visit, https://tickets.blackknightinn.ca. efawcett@reddeerexpress.com
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And the best leg workout around is…. Strengthen and tone your leg muscles (and entire body) with these effective exercises.
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WHEELER Giving your legs a good workout offers multiple rewards. For one, your leg muscles will be strengthened to reveal a shapely and athletic lower body. And second, because your leg muscles are the largest muscles in your body, working them provides the greatest calorie burn and helps you build other muscles (boost your internal metabolism). On the days you focus on strength training at the gym, be sure to give your legs a great foundation by building your workouts around these five great exercises. You may be a little sore the next day, but you won’t be disappointed. Good leg workouts are best bang for your buck for strength, fat loss, calorie burn and functional movement. Back squat - one of the most effective exercises you can do is the squat. It’s challenging yet simple and works practically every muscle in your body - especially those in your lower body. To build leg muscles and tone your glutes, try a back squat using the barbell in the power rack. Rest the bar high on your back near the base of your neck and hold the bar near your shoulders. Take the bar off the rack, place your feet a little wider than shoulder-width apart, and point your toes slightly out. Take a breath, bend your knees, and lower until your thighs are parallel to the floor or lower. Raise back up and exhale near the top. Breathe and repeat. The whole time, keep your head in line with the rest of your upper body and maintain a tight core. Deadlift - with a weighted barbell on the floor in front of your shins, place your feet shoulder-width
apart, slightly angled out and flat on the floor. Grab the bar with your palms facing you, slightly wider than your thighs. You can also have a mixed grip (one hand facing you, the other facing away from your body.) Use the strength of your lower body muscles (not your arms or back) to lift the bar off the floor until you are in standing position. You should feel like you’re pushing the floor down with your feet. Make sure your shoulders and hips are rising at the same time to ensure you’re using the right muscles. Then lower the bar down to the floor using reverse motions. Repeat. Weighted lunge - a third leg exercise that’s sure to provide results is the weighted lunge. Holding a
dumbbell in each hand by your side, step far forward, backward, or to the side with one leg and lower your body until your front thigh is parallel to the floor. Keep your torso upright and maintain your balance through the entire movement. Take care your knee goes no farther than your toes. Return to a standing position. Repeat on the same leg, alternate legs, do walking lunges, or jump up and switch legs midair. Leg press - this exercise uses the leg press weight machine and mainly works your quadriceps (the muscles on the front of your thighs). Place the desired amount of weight on the machine pins, sit on the seat, and put your feet on the platform shoulder-width apart. Let the weighted platform lower
so your knees are bent, then press the platform up until your legs are straight in front of you (without locking your knees). Inhale and slower lower the platform until your legs bend at a 90-degree angle. Then push with your heels and use your quadriceps to straighten your legs again as you exhale. Repeat. Front squat - the front squat works multiple muscles but really targets your quadriceps. Again, use the barbell in the power rack. Load the bar and bring your arms under the bar. Bend your elbows, keeping them high while you hold onto the bar. Position the bar across the top of your chest and lift the bar off the rack by using your legs and straightening your body. Keep you head up and step back from the rack, placing your
feet shoulder-width apart, toes pointed slightly out. Inhale and then lower your body into a squat until your thighs are parallel to the floor or below, making sure your knees don’t pass your toes. Raise the bar using your legs and exhale back into starting position. Repeat. Form first - remember, proper form for weight lifting is essential to avoid injury and see results. This is especially true with lower body workouts as the weight loads can be high and with improper form, the result could mean serious injury and soreness. Work with your trainer to ensure these exercises are done correctly and effectively - safety first. Jack Wheeler is a personal trainer and the owner of 360 Fitness in Red Deer.
COLOURFUL - Liam MacKinnon, 5, browsed through some of the colourful flowers on display during the recent Alberta Dahlia and Gladiolus Society’s Annual Dahlia and Gladiolus Show at Bower Mall. The show featured hundreds of blooms of all different descriptions from across the province. Zachary Cormier/Red Deer Express
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Are you waiting to treat prostate cancer? Doctors have stressed for years it’s vital to treat all cancers early to increase the chance of cure. But one rogue malignancy rarely obeys the rules. Now, a report in the Canadian Medical Association Journal says, ‘active surveillance’ is increasingly used to treat prostate cancer. The big question is how many patients want to wait when told they have a malignancy? But why is this currently a choice? Autopsies show that 50 percent of men over age 59 have prostate cancer, and three in four over 85. One in seven North Americans will be diagnosed with prostate cancer in their lifetime, yet only one in every 28 men will die of it. Obviously, not all need to be treated. Why does this happen? It’s because prostate cancer can be as tame as a pussy cat. Many men may die of other diseases never knowing they have this malignancy. However,
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JONES some prostate cancers act like a raging tiger that kills. So how do doctors decide which is which? Unfortunately, it’s not easy. The PSA test measures the level of a protein in the blood produced by the prostate gland. The higher the level the greater the chance of trouble. But some authorities argue the PSA test should never be done as it can result in needless treatment, with complications such as urinary incontinence and impotence. But if the test has already been ordered and found abnormal, a decision must be made. The next step involves biopsies of the prostate gland. These are analyzed by a pathologist to eval-
uate the cellular pattern. He reports what’s called the Gleason Score, of one to 10. The higher the number the greater the risk of trouble. The problem is that neither test is infallible. Consequently, this rogue malignancy has always required the Wisdom of Solomon to predict which cancers should be treated. So now what criteria are doctors using when they suggest watchful waiting? First, several biopsies must show relatively normal-looking cells. Being an older patient is a help as there’s a possibility of death from other medical problems before death from prostate cancer. The prostate gland will also be monitored at regular intervals by rectal exams, more PSA tests, CT Scans and possibly repeat biopsies. At the first sign that the guidelines are changing, then a decision must be made as to the best method of treatment.
I have spent hours reading international reports of the results of active, watchful waiting. The jury is still out. So, both doctors and patients must make the decision of their life when faced with this rogue cancer. The grim fact is that some patients who decide on watchful waiting will die if the cancer spreads to other organs before treatment is started. But, on the other hand, some will also die prematurely from surgical complications when their life is not threatened by the cancer. Several years ago a tennis friend, during an annual checkup, had a PSA test done. His level was slightly
elevated. But five biopsies of the prostate gland were normal. Then a sixth one revealed a slight change. Since he was 74 years of age these minute microscopic cells might not have killed him for 15 years. So I strongly and repeatedly advised him against surgery. But psychologically he could not live knowing a few cells were abnormal. A radical prostatectomy was done. He died of a blood clot (pulmonary embolism) as he was walking out of the hospital. It was the result of the surgery and a totally needless death. It’s been said that, “If you’re not confused about prostate cancer you don’t know what’s going on!” But
once diagnosed a decision must be made. Some men, with young wives and families, may be unwilling to accept watchful waiting as being too risky. Older ones may prefer to live with the devil they know than face the potential complications of treatment. As one of the experts remarked years ago, “Getting older is invariably fatal, cancer of the prostate only sometimes.” Remember, this column is only for informational purposes and not intended to treat or cure disease. You must always see your own doctor. See the web site www.docgiff.com for past columns. For comments info@docgiff.com.
Step ‘N Stride event to take place Walk raises money for those with Parkinson Disease BY KALISHA MENDONSA RED DEER EXPRESS
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Parkinson Alberta is hoping to draw a large crowd to their annual Flexxaire Step ‘N Stride fundraising event that will take place on Sept. 10th. The Step ‘N Stride event is the organization’s largest annual fundraiser and will take place this year at the Golden Circle, with registration at 9 a.m. and the walk starting at 10:30 a.m. Registration and donations can be done online at www.parkinsonalberta/ stepnstride. “Our Step ‘N Stride event is important for a number of reasons. The first reason is that it brings people together,” said Kelsey Van Grinsven of Parkinson Alberta, Red Deer Region. “People with Parkinson’s often suffer from apathy and depression and it’s easy for them to get stuck in their homes. This event brings people out and together and helps to develop a sense of community. Second to that, this is our largest fundraiser and in 10 communities across the province, Step ‘N Stride raised over $325,000. It’s amazing and incredible and it’s all thanks to our clients with Parkinson’s, their families, friends and neighbours coming together.” Van Grinsven said the organization hopes to reach or surpass that provincial goal this year, and officials are eager to be bringing new aspects to this year’s event. “This year, we are changing a little bit to get more of the community out. We’ve added a Kid’s Zone with small activities and a bouncy house to accommodate
families,” she said. “It’s also being designed as a sort of wellness fair, so we are including wellness booths and vendors so people can get an idea of tools to help those with Parkinson’s and to get more information into the community. We’re hoping to round it out a bit more with a bigger, better show this year. “We’re really hoping people come out to support their friends and family members who are living with Parkinson’s disease. It’s important to note people can also register online and collect pledges online.” Money raised through the Step ‘N Stride events stays in Alberta in order to offer support services such as in-person support groups, personalized support, education, awareness and advocacy campaigns. Van Grinsven said it’s important to the organization to raise the profile of Parkinson Disease so that those living with it can continue to get the help and support they deserve. “It’s a very important event to bring people together. As our largest fundraiser, it’s a huge bulk of what allows us to give the support that we do to Albertans,” she said. “We offer in-person support groups across Central Alberta, which is important to us because not all organizations are able to offer in-person support groups. We also offer programming - for example, our boxing program. The ability for us to provide programs and develop those all comes from the success of our Step ‘N Stride event.” kmendonsa@reddeerexpress.com
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Rookies impress at Rebels pre-season tourney BY ZACHARY CORMIER RED DEER EXPRESS The Red Deer Rebels’ young crop of rookies weren’t going to sit back during their first opportunity to impress Head Coach and General Manager Brent Sutter last weekend. A young squad of Rebels hopefuls and veterans jumped at the chance to show their skills during a pre-season tournament hosted by the Rebs at the ENMAX Centrium last Friday and Saturday, splitting their two games at the tourney. “We had some opportunities,” said Sutter after a 6-4 loss to the Calgary Hitmen on Saturday. Sutter’s team also put up a 6-1 victory over the Edmonton Oil Kings on Friday night. The Prince George Cougars was the fourth and final team in attendance at the tournament, which simply allowed the WHL teams to get their players into game situations before NHL camps start up later this month. Sutter said he was impressed with the way that some of the younger players, including some of the 16-year-olds were able to compete with the veterans on the Hitmen and Oil Kings rosters. “I thought that some of our young kids struggled in the first period, but then after they got caught up with the pace — tonight was a much different level of game than it was last night,” Sutter said after the Calgary game, which saw the Rebels’ young players really get to see how an elite WHL team plays. “We’ve seen a lot more veterans in the lineup tonight. We played this team in playoffs last year and we know what type of players these guys have and the compete level and how quick they can be.” Sutter added he thought the team’s young players adapted well to the Hitmen’s speed. “It took them probably a period and a half to adjust to what the pace was like and the way they
FIRST IMPRESSIONS - From right, Brandon Cutler of the Red Deer Rebels tried to defend against Parker Smyth of the Calgary Hitmen during pre-season action at the ENMAX Centrium last weekend. Cutler had two goals in two games on the weekend. have to play. I thought they got better.” Among the Rebels rookies that stood out, Sutter said, was 16-year-old winger Brandon Cutler, who had a goal in each of the two games the team played last weekend. “Cutler was outstanding again. For a 16-year-old he’s certainly making a push here, which is good to see,” said the coach, adding that the sixfoot tall Spruce Grove native is currently one of the front-runners as final cuts loom on the horizon. “I’m coming as an underdog, coming ninth-round
here. Just looking to show that I should have went a lot lower in the draft. I think I deserved to go as a first or second or third round pick. But I think I’m earning my way,” said Cutler, who was taken by the Rebels in the eighth round, 192nd overall in the 2015 WHL bantam draft. The rookie forward added that the relatively low selection has created somewhat of a chip on his shoulder and he’s out to prove that he can be a force in the Rebels’ WHL lineup. “I just got back from an injury not too long ago. I lost 30 pounds
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or whatever but it doesn’t matter. No excuses, right?” As it turns out, Cutler, along with the rest of the rookies, may be called upon to step up in a big way for the Rebels, as fan favourite veteran forward Evan Polei, one of the team’s 20-yearold players, left Saturday night’s game with what Sutter described as an upper-body injury. “He’ll be out for a bit,” Sutter said. Polei, who worked his way into the hearts of Rebels’ fans last season thanks to a very strong playoff campaign, solidified his
Zachary Cormier/Red Deer Express
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26 RED DEER EXPRESS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
SPORTS
Shepherd lifts way to Alberta’s Strongest Man title BY ZACHARY CORMIER RED DEER EXPRESS It’s been a long road filled with lots of hard work, but after years of training a Red Deerian man can finally claim the title of Alberta’s Strongest Man. Brad Shepherd of Red Deer laid claim to the prestigious title after putting up a dominant performance in the Super Heavyweight category at the 2016 Alberta Strongman/Strongwoman Provincial Championship in Fort McMurray last month. “I just had what it took this year, so it feels pretty good,” said Shepherd of his win at the Aug. 27th event, which featured five different events such as the giant tire flip, where competitors have to flip an 850 lb. tire eight times in 75 seconds, and the Atlas Stones, in which competitors in the super heavyweight have to pick up a 340 lb. stone
and put it over a 50-inch bar as many times as they can. “I only needed two to win show, so I did three just to show off for the crowd,” laughed Shepherd of the Atlas Stones event, which sealed his victory.
“I JUST HAD WHAT IT TOOK THIS YEAR, SO IT FEELS PRETTY GOOD.” BRAD SHEPHERD
Shepherd’s win at the Alberta event means that he qualifies for the Canadian championship competition in Regina later this month. “If I go win nationals it would actually qualify me to
compete on the pro-circuit.” This was Shepherd’s fourth time competing in the annual provincial competition, which features the best strongmen from all over the province. But this year’s competition actually bore a special significance for the 314 lb. strongman. “This is the first year that we’ve managed to have athletes in every weight class out of Red Deer. That’s never happened before. Up until this year there’s actually only been two strong men out of Red Deer,” Shepherd said. The City’s super heavyweight representative was joined by fellow Red Deerians Brett Milne in the middleweight, Ryan Jabalee as the light heavyweight competitor and Shepherd’s long-time training partner Dylan Olafson as the heavyweight competitor. “I wasn’t even planning on doing this competition this year but it was just because the other
three guys had qualified and they were going. So it was like, well if they’re going I have to go,” Shepherd said, adding the group was really lucky to find a permanent training space this year. “We got really lucky this year. There’s a personal training gym up on the north end called Ludus Fitness. They had the opportunity with the slower economy to move into a much bigger space. They had a bunch of extra room but they didn’t have equipment to fill it.” So the gym invited the strongman group into the space. “They gave us a home where we can actually train for this stuff, which we’ve never had before. So through that we were able to encourage a couple of other guys to try it out,” Shepherd said. Those two new guys were Milne and Jabalee, both of whom competed in their first Alberta’s
Strongest Man competition late last month. Milne finished in second in the middleweight competition and will join Shepherd at nationals in Regina. “He’s a pretty decent powerlifter. He decided to jump forward and did one competition earlier this year out in B.C. just to kind of get his feet wet and through that he would qualify for Alberta’s. He came up and he did really well. He was up against one of the top strongmen in Alberta named Nolan Sauve and he managed to beat (Sauve) in an event,” said Shepherd of Milne. Shepherd added anyone wanting to try out strength athletics can drop by Ludus Fitness and speak to one of the powerlifters. Shepherd and Milne will be back in action at the Canadian Championships in Regina on Sept. 24th. zcormier@reddeerexpress.com
Fantasy football tips from someone who’s never done it Okay this is going to sound weird coming from someone who earns a living as a sports reporter,
but I’ve never participated in any kind of fantasy sports league. Ever since the dawn of
the Internet era, the idea of fantasy sports leagues has become a movement of its own. There are hun-
RENTAL EQUIPMENT DISPERSAL ACT ACTION RENTALS (Sundre Division)
AUCTION THURSDAY, SEPT. 15, 2016 @ 10 AM T
Online Bidding Available
SALE SITE: MONTGOMERY AUCTION SALES CENTRE 1 Mile North of Blackfalds, AB. 2 Miles East on Lakeside Sargent Rd.
Selling All Terrain Telescopic Boom Man Lifts & Forklifts, Scissor Aerial Work Platforms, 5-Cat Skid Steers, Komatsu Mini Excavator, Ground Compaction Equipment, Trailer Type Air Compressors, Trailer Type Diesel Generators, Light Towers, Kubota 2350 4x4 Diesel Tractor, Wheat Heart Post Pounder, Equipment Trailers, 40’ C-Cans, Scaffolding, Frost Fighter Heaters, Skidded Fuel Vaults, Welders, Gen Sets, Skid Steer attachments, Lawn Equipment, Vehicles,
Tools & much more! Also Consigned: 2-Continental Snow King Deluxe V- Nose 24’ Cargo Trailers, Hurricane 22’ Cargo Trailer w/Fold Down Rear Door, 2006 Harley Davidson Road King Motorcycle - Premium Cond., Yamaha Rhino 4x4 RTV Side by Side, Can-Am 800 Renegade Hi-Output 4x4 ATV, 2006 Argo Big Foot 6x6 ATV, 2012 Dodge Laramie Long Horn 2500 4x4 Quad Cab Truck w/Cummins Eng., AT, Leather 134,207KM
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: This is a complete dispersal of the Sundre Office only. There are also some very good quality consignments. See Pics and more details on website. Viewing: Wed. Sept 14, 9am – 4pm • Subject to Additions & Deletions Cash/Credit Card/Cheques w/Bank Letter of Credit 10% Buyers Fee 15% On-Line Buyers Fee
SEE WEBSITE FOR FULL LISTING AND PICTURES
M
Y
ONTGOMER
AUCTION SERVICES LTD.
1-800-371-6963 403-885-5149 BLACKFALDS, ALBERTA
www.montgomeryauctions.com
Zachary
CORMIER dreds of web sites set up specifically to host a fantasy league, regardless of whether anyone doing fantasy hockey, baseball, basketball or the grand daddy of them all - fantasy football. You can play fantasy sports with friends, co-workers, bar mates or some randoms that you met on the Internet. You can play for money, a big shiny trophy (or one of those little plastic dollar store ones, I won’t judge), or bragging rights. With how prevalent the game has become over the past few years, especially when it comes to the NFL, it’s hard to imagine that anyone hasn’t actually heard of it. If you haven’t, that’s what Google is for. Earlier this month, one of my colleagues asked me if I would like to join a fantasy football league with him and a few friends. Personally, I’ve never followed the NFL that closely, but hey why not? I mean how hard could it be? So, after hours of reading Wikipedia posts and countless columns along with hours invested into Madden 16’s Be an Owner mode, I present to you your all inclusive guide to
fantasy football, written by a guy who has literally no idea what he’s talking about. Step 1: Choose a draft strategy. Supposedly draft day is the most fun part of any fantasy football league season because it’s the day when you really get to build your team. This is in stark contrast to draft day in the real NFL where everyone watches the first round and then changes the channel to reruns of NBC’s Mike and Molly. The first thing that I learned about drafting a fantasy football team is that, somewhat counter intuitively, you don’t pick a quarterback first. Heck, unless you’re picking Cam Newton (a fantasy football God apparently), you generally don’t pick your QB until the fourth or fifth round. This, for obvious reasons, hurts my brain because any real football team builds their offense from the QB outwards and now I’m supposed to ignore that and take Antonio Brown with the first overall pick. Why? Because math and numbers and things. Step 2: Fantasy rankings are your friend. Pretty much every major sports network these days has a part of their staff dedicated to fantasy sports. These are people who are paid to sit and watch every game and write long articles telling fantasy owners exactly which players are going to have breakout seasons and which players are going to
inexplicably tank this season. How do they know this? By comparing and contrasting various sets of data — *zones out and starts checking Twitter to see if the Habs have traded Carey Price to Colorado in exchange for Patrick Roy’s contract yet*. Step 3: Late round sleeper picks can make all the difference. Apparently this is a thing. After all, if you take a seventh round flier on Browns’ receiver Josh Gordon and he goes onto put up 2,000 yards receiving you’re going to look like a freaking genius. Step 4: Learn some new swear words. That way you won’t be left saying the same thing every time one of your best starters gets hurt. Step 5: Check the waiver wire obsessively. Between this and Pokemon Go, I’m going to get my cardio this fall solely from the repetitive motion of removing my phone from my pocket every five and a half seconds. Step 6: Trash talk everyone and everything, regardless of whether you win or lose. Hey, even if you end up 0-16 on the season at least you’ll feel a bit better about yourself if you had the best zinger of the year. That’s it. I can guarantee that if you follow these six simple steps, you’ll win as many fantasy league championships as the Cleveland Browns have won Super Bowls. zcormier@reddeerexpress.com
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
RED DEER EXPRESS 27
HOMES & LIVING
REFRESHING - This beautiful, modern Krest show home in Vanier East utilizes light colours, a large window and varying textures to develop a luxurious feel in the living room. Kalisha Mendonsa/Red Deer Express
A throwback to the designs of yesteryear Once upon a time, I thought I had style. If you imagine every bad 80’s stereotype for big hair, neon clothes and Flashdanceinspired garb that was me. I don’t know how I ever afforded all the hairspray I used and how it is even possible that I didn’t combust wearing all the rayon and polyester clothing – not to mention all the gaudy, plastic jewelry. I was the poster child for the 80s and I embraced the look with every ounce of enthusiasm that I could. I was not a neutral fashionista! Recently I was able to visit a client whose home I had decorated almost 10 years ago. I remembered her after we got chatting and was amazed that she remembered me with such clarity. When I walked into her home I mentally travelled back in time to the days when I helped her with her home renovation. Not a
Kim
WYSE thing had changed for she claimed she loved the design so much yet I was a little taken aback at my taste from yesteryear and how much my style has changed over a decade. Styles were much frillier then and apparently I was really into a paint colour called ‘Sundried Tomato’ which is exactly as it sounds – a purplish based red that was a favourite of mine and was used without spare in this client’s home. My client was wanting to sell her property and felt that even though she loved the red that a new buyer may not feel the love
Condos Start at $ 226,900 Including GST 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths Immediate Possession
but feel overwhelmed when they entered the rooms. Taking cues from her current décor and existing tile, countertops and carpet we were able to pull off a soft neutral which opened up the walls and visually made the space seem bright and very open. The red paint took a bit of work to cover but she was able to use a decent primer and make the transition to a pale colour. I believe the client was ready for a change and using a lighter colour was the perfect solution to bringing her existing finishings a bright, fresh and renewed look. When I look back at designs I created years ago I wonder at how my taste has changed so drastically. I still like strong reds and oranges (as I do still like bigger hair) but my overall view on homes has lightened and brightened considerably. The thought of painting an entire room
chocolate brown is overwhelming whereas I would easily recommend that to a client in years past. Maybe it’s age or experience and maybe its just flowing with the times and the styles of the day but either way things have lightened up considerably and at this moment I can’t imagine ever going back to the dark and dramatic. Hopefully your décor doesn’t travel as far back as 1984 and I hope that you love the house you are in regardless of the era and style. At the time we are choosing hairstyles and house colours we are completely entranced with that choice and it provides enjoyment even if we look back years later and wonder what the heck we were thinking! Kim Wyse is a local freelance designer. Find her on facebook at ‘Ask a Designer/Ask a Realtor’.
New Show Suites Now Open
Open Daily 1-5 PM
SEE DEVELOPER FOR DETAILS
1,069 – 1,119 SQ FT in Blackfalds Pet Friendly with quick access to the QE2, Hwy 2A, & Hwy 597 Valley Crossing makes the commute a breeze. www.valleycrossing.ca B8, 5300 Vista Trail, Blackfalds 403-600-0317
28 RED DEER EXPRESS
HOMES & LIVING
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
The ‘Once upon a Mortgage’ fairytale Do you remember the ‘choose your own adventure’ books? You would read through the story and watch as the hero or heroine battled through their struggles until you got to the page where your involvement was required. You could choose path A and turn to page X or you could choose path B and turn to page Z. The choice was yours and they were kind of fun to read as I recall. Anyway, what if we changed our thinking about mortgages a little so that you, the intrepid mortgage borrower, could look at the whole process where you are actually the one in control? That based on your plans and your budget you could determine the best mortgage option for your situation. So here we go, once upon a mortgage…
Pam
PIKKERT that Indiana Jones grabbed just before running for his life and so they feel reluctant to accept this seemingly too good to be true mortgage. Louis and Lulu know they can feel confident that they are choosing the best mortgage as long as they have asked all of the questions above. Moral - if you think about how much time it took them to save the money and establish the credit and find the home then it really seems like taking a few
hours to research and ensure they are making the best mortgage decision is a very good idea before they turn the page Story two – meet Al - a young brave entrepreneur who has successfully built a thriving business. Being wise for his age, Al has listened to his accountant who has counselled him to claim a low income to avoid paying any unnecessary taxes. Al works hard and saves his pennies and meets a lovely maiden with whom he wishes to make a home. He sets off to the mortgage broker and is told that he has an important choice ahead of him. He can choose the lowest rate available on the market but he must pay a very high mortgage default insurance premium because he has not claimed much income or he can choose a higher interest rate with a
Story one - Louis and Lulu, are a young couple who have saved their down payment and carefully built their credit. They and the clever realtor have found the perfect home and navigated the negotiations painlessly and now it is time to make all the choices in their mortgage adventure. But wait! Now that their search engine knows they are looking for a mortgage, they are being bombarded by rate sites and are feeling a bit overwhelmed. How do they choose? What is the difference between the offers? Here are the questions they really should ask before they sign: • If a new adventure beacons and I have to break this mortgage, how will the penalty be calculated? How does that compare to other lenders? • Can I take this mortgage with me to a new home if I want? Do you lend all over this vast country? Are there time constraints if I do move my mortgage? • What if I come across a pile of gold and I want to pay down this mortgage? How much extra and how often can I do so?” And then, Louis and Lulu see a really low rate offer that seems eerily like the idol
YOUR HOUSE
YOUR
HOME To advertise in Your House Your Home Contact Jenna at
403-347-9474 or yhyh@blackpress.ca
lower fee and in the end save himself a lot of money though he will not be able to brag of having captured the lowest mortgage rate ever. Moral of this story is there is a lot more to a mortgage than the rate he was offered. So this was an unusual article about mortgages to say the least but if it has caused you to realize that you are the one in charge of getting the best mortgage for yourself, which will not only save you money but avoid pitfalls down the road, then it was certainly worth the time it took to peruse. Pam Pikkert is a mortgage broker with Dominion Lending Centres - Regional Mortgage Group in Red Deer.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
RED DEER EXPRESS 29
Red Deer Express
CLASSIFIEDS To place an ad
Buying, Selling or Renting? Classifieds HAS IT.
403.309.3300 or email classifieds@reddeerexpress.com call
Announcements .................... 0005-0030
Items to Buy/Sell .....................1500-1940
Open House Directory .......... 4200-4310
What’s Happening ................. 0049-0070
Agricultural ..............................2000-2210
Financial .................................4400-4430
Garage Sales ........................... 0100-0650
For Rent ...................................3000-3200
Transportation ....................... 5000-5240
Employment ............................0700-0920
Wanted to Rent....................... 3250-3390
Legal/Public Notices ............6000-9000
Service Directory .................... 1000-1430
Real Estate .............................. 4000-4190
Births
Oilfield
800
SNUBBING Operators
Looking for experienced snubbing operators. Must have current valid oilÀeld tickets and driver’s license. Must be able to provide drivers abstract, and pass a drug/alcohol test. Please forward resume to: jredmond@ teamsnubbing.com
ARE YOU EXPECTING A BABY SOON?
Welcome Wagon
has a special package just for you & your little one! For more information, Call Lori, 403-896-6100
Coming Events
52
All Visits are Free. No Obligation. Compliments of Local Businesses. Are you new to the neighbourhood? Expecting a Baby? Planning a Wedding? Call or visit us online! 1-844-299-2466 welcomewagon.ca
Lost
54
MINI DASCHAUND, short brown hair, lost at 3 Mile Off Leash Dog Park. Comes to the name Hannah. If found please call 403-396-4726
Found
56
SHOPPING bag of Nutter’s items accidently put in my car. Call to identify. 403-318-6601 WATCH found at 3 Mile Bend, in parking lot. Call 403-505-0819 to claim, Must Identify.
Personals
Restaurant/ Hotel
60
IMAGINE a Walk-In Clinic where Jesus is the Doctor. Red Deer Healing Rooms operates like a Walk-In Clinic, except it’s Free and open to all! Open Tuesdays from 7:00 to 9:00 PM at: The Space, 5305 - 50th Ave., Red Deer Open to anyone needing healing. No appointment necessary. Ph 403-350-8954
820
JJAM Management (1987) Ltd., o/a Tim Horton’s Requires to work at these Red Deer, AB locations: #3, 5111 22 St. 37444 HWY 2 S 37543 HWY 2N 700 3020 22 St. Food Service Supervisor Req’d F/T & P/T permanent shift, early morning, morning, day, eves. shift weekend day night. 40 - 44 hrs/wk 8 Vacancies, $13.75 /hr. + medical, dental, life and vision beneÀts. Start ASAP. Job description www.timhortons.com Experience 1 yr. to less than 2 yrs. Education not req’d. Apply in person or fax 403-314-1303
Classifieds...costs so little Saves you so much!
Caregivers/ Aides
830
Looking for a new pet? Check out Classifieds to find the purrfect pet.
790
MEDICAL TRAINEES needed now! Hospitals & doctor’s ofÀces need certiÀed medical ofÀce & administrative staff! No experience needed! We can get you trained! Local job placement assistance available when training is completed. Call for program details! 1-888-627-0297. Classifieds Your place to SELL Your place to BUY
LINE COOK NEEDED for evenings, f/t or p/t. Experience required. Apply in person inside Jackpot Casino.
Sales & Distributors
830
FONESHOP COMMUNICATIONS located at Bower Place, #200 - 4900 Molly Banister Dr, Red Deer, AB T4R 1N9, requires a F/T, Perm. Assistant Manager-Retail; min. 1-2 yrs of related sales exp., to start ASAP. Duties: Plan, direct and evaluate the operations, Manage staff and assign duties, Resolve customer complaints etc. Wages $26.50/Hr. Email Resume retailjobs@ mywirelessworld.ca
Misc. Help
880
WIRELESS World Solutions at 107-4747 67 ST, RED DEER, AB, requires a F/T, Perm. Assistant Manager-Retail with min. 1-2 yrs of related sales exp., ASAP. Duties: Plan, direct and evaluate the operations, Manage staff and assign duties, Resolve customer complaints etc. Wages $26.50/Hr. Email Resume - retailjobs@ mywirelessworld.ca
FEMALE for cleaning, shopping, assist senior male. Paid daily. Resume & ref’s req’d. 403-342-6545
850
Busy road construction company looking for Labourers AND Áag persons. Work is throughout Alberta. Must have a Class 5 license. Fax resume to 403-309-0489
Trades
OPERATORS
Busy road construction company looking for Ànishing, hoe, and dozer operators. Min. 5 yrs. exp. Work is throughout Alberta. Must have a Class 5 license. Fax resume to 403-309-0489
Truckers/ Drivers
860
710
In-home Caregiver for 2 Boys . 403-356-2075 Deer Park Red Deer
Medical
Sales & Distributors
CENTRAL AB based trucking company requires
CONTRACT DRIVERS
in AB. Super B exp. req’d. Home the odd night. Weekends off. 403-586-4558
Business Opportunities
870
GET FREE vending machines. Can earn $100,000.00 + per year. All cash-locations provided. Protected territories. Interest free Ànancing. Full details call now 1-866-668-6629. Website www.tcvend.com
LABOURERS & FLAG PERSONS
SANDMAN INNS rural BC recruiting Management Couples. Great beneÀt package, accommodation provided (subject to location) & guaranteed days off. Send resume to: jobs@sandman.ca. SHRUMS MEATS Stettler, BUTCHER Phone 1-403-742-1427 or fax 403-742-1429
Employment Training
900
INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT SCHOOL. Hands-On Tasks. Start Weekly. GPS Training! Funding & Housing Available! Job Aid! Already a HEO? Get certiÀcation proof. Call 1-866-399-3853 or go to: iheschool.com. MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have work-athome positions available. Get online training you need from an employertrusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!
Advocate Opportunities CARRIERS NEEDED TO DELIVER FLYERS 2 DAYS A WEEK. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 403-314-4394
* No cancellations, refunds or exchanges. Please read your ad the first day it appears. We will accept responsibility for 1 insertion only.
Auctions
1530
ACTION RENTALS (Sundre Division) Dispersal Auction. Thursday, September 15, 10 a.m., MAS Sales Centre, Blackfalds, Alberta. Selling manlifts, telehandlers, skid steers, scissor lifts, ground compaction, trailers, compressors, light towers, heaters, generators, HD motorcycle, ATV’s, vehicles, tools & more. See www.montgomeryauctions.com 1-800-371-6963. AUCTION SALE Parkland Packers 1976 Ltd. September 24, 9 a.m. 52521A Glory Hills Rd, Stony Plain, Alberta. Abattoir, butchering, processing, retail supplies. View items & details at www.spectrumauctioneering.com 780-967-3375 / 780-903-9393. Tired of Standing? Find something to sit on in Classifieds
Clothing
1590
Misc. for Sale
1760
LADIES Clothes, size 6 8, sweaters, blouses, pants, good cond. All for $25. 403-314-9603
100 VHS movies, $75 for all. 403-885-5020 Classifieds...costs so little Saves you so much!
1620
2 ELECTRIC LAMPS, $20. 403-885-5020
EquipmentMisc.
A-STEEL SHIPPING CONTAINERS. 20’, 40’ & 53’. 40’ insulated reefers/freezers. ModiÀcations possible windows, doors, walls, as ofÀce, living work-shop, etc., 40’ Áatrack/bridge. 1-866-528-7108; www.rtccontainer.com.
Farmers' Market
1650
IF ANYONE has extra garden vegetables they would like to Give Away Please call. 403-346-7825
Firewood
1660
4 LAWN Chairs, 1 patio table & 2 steel chairs. $40. 403-342-4949, 780-717-6206 BOX of Misc. Household items. Includes frypans, cookbooks, mixing bowl and other misc. $15. 403-314-9603 FIREPLACE, electric, 47”x39”, $100. 403-346-2346 GARDEN FOUNTAIN, $50. Various garden ornaments (6), $2. ea. 403-346-2346 MIRROR, gold frame, 36”x46”, $20., Standing LAMP, $10. , GLASS TOP TABLE, with gold fabric Skirt, $5. 403-346-2346
LOGS COLLECTOR CAR AUCTION. 9th Annual Red Semi loads of pine, spruce, MOTORCYCLE PICTURE, tamarack, poplar, birch. 40”x30”, $30.; Deer Fall Finale Collector Price depends on location 403-314-9603 Car Auction. 200 cars. of delivery. Lil Mule Westerner Park, Sept 9, 10 SAWMILLS from only Logging 403-318-4346 & 11. Last year sold over $4,397. Make money & 85 percent. Time to consave money with your own sign, all makes models bandmill. Cut lumber any welcome. 1-888-296-0528 Health & dimension. In stock ready Beauty ext 102 or 103. Conto ship. Free info & dvd: sign@egauctions.com. www.NorwoodSawEGauctions.com. Featur- DEBLISS Oxygen Concenmills.com/400OT. ing Horny Mike from hit TV trator, used 2 mos.; $800.; 1-800-566-6899 ext. Acorn Chair lift, $1500.; series Counting Cars. 400OT. Luxury lift chair, recliner, MEIER GUN AUCTION. heated/power, brown. SIMPLICITY dehumidiÀer, Saturday, September 10, $750. 403-347-4520 #SDR2507EE with manual, 11 a.m., 6016 - 72A Ave., $25. 403-347-3849 Edmonton. Over 150 guns Household - handguns, riÁes, shotWATER HOSE REEL, guns, hunting and sporting Appliances $35. 403-885-5020 equipment. To consign 780-440-1860. KENMORE deep freezer, UNRESERVED MACHINE 32” wide by 22” long, $40. Cats 403-347-3849 & Fabricating Shop Auction. Thursday, 2 KITTENS, 1 Siamese September 15, 10 a.m., Household male, $50; and 2 grey 7105 - 39 St., Leduc. Furnishings kittens to give away. 700 lots of modern well 403-887-3649 maintained equipment. SEARS braided wool area 4 - 61’ span 10 ton O/H rug, 9 x 7, blue, grey, cranes, shop ventilation brown, green, and beige in Wanted system, modern 1060 X color. Exc. cond. $200. To Buy 2000CNC lathe, 2014 Ph. 403-346-7825 modern 10’ manual lathe, 20 welders, modern & BUFFET w/ hutch and Hyd-Mech saws JCB 456 drawers suitable for condo. Stereos loader with attachments, Must be in good condition TV's, VCRs potable welding trucks, and reasonably priced. steel inventory. Details: Ph. 403 346-5360 CASSETTE / CD player, www.foothillsauctions.com. CELEBRATIONS Sony (mini hi-À component Call 780-922-6090. HAPPEN EVERY DAY system) $125. Foothills Equipment IN CLASSIFIEDS 403-346-7825 Liquidation.
1700
1710
1830
1720
1930
1730
30 RED DEER EXPRESS Grain, Feed Hay
2190
HEATED CANOLA buying Green, Heated or Springthrashed Canola. Buying: oats, barley, wheat & peas for feed. Buying damaged or offgrade grain. “On Farm Pickup” Westcan Feed & Grain, 1-877-250-5252.
Houses/ Duplexes
3020
Realtors & Services
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
Welcome
4010
Back!
PRAIRIESKY ROYALTY LTD. is a publicly-traded company in Calgary that acquires oil & gas fee title and royalty interests at fair market value. To receive a cash offer, call 587-293-4055 or visit www.prairiesky.com/ Selling-Your-Royalties .
Houses For Sale
Stop in & see
Nathan Cottenie today!
587.377.4797
4020
2 BDRM. Blackfalds, duplex, 4 appl., $1000/mo.+ utils., 403-318-3284 DUPLEX, Ponoka, rental income $1500. Asking 3 BDRM., 1 1/2 baths, $1150. Close to amenities. $225,000. 403-963-0204 403-782-7156, 357-7465 4 BDRMS, 2 1/2 baths, Farms/ single car garage, 5 appls, Land $1250/mo. in Red Deer. 403-782-7156 2 AND A 1/2 QUARTERS 403-357-7465 of land near Prince Albert, NOW Avail., main Ár., 4 SK with nice full yard & bdrm., 1.5 baths, XL heatbeautiful garden. Grows ed dble. garage. WestPark good crops. Great $1550. rent & dd. + power opportunity for starter & gas. 403-391-2292 farmer. Call Doug for further details SYLVAN, 5 fully furn. rentals 306-716-2671. incld’s all utils. & cable. $550 - $1600./ mo. neg. details call 403-880-0210 Manufactured
3030
3 BRDM. 2 bath, 5 appls. $1100 rent. Avail Oct. 1 PH 493 347-2151 AVAIL. Oct. 1, 3 bdrm. townhouse close to schools and all amenities, 4 appls, rent $1125 + utils. + DD. 403-506-0054
Suites
3060
BACHELOR, 1, & 2 Bedroom Suites Starting at $849/month! One Month Rent FREE! One FREE year of Telus cable & internet. Cat friendly. 1(888)482-1711 leasing@rentmidwest.com EASTVIEW, 1 bdrm. bsmt. suite, fully furnished, n/s, no pets, $750/mo., for single . Utils. incld. Avail. immed. 403-782-9357 or 352-1964 LACOMBE:1 bdrm. suite, $795. 403-782-7156, 357-7465
MORRISROE MANOR Rental incentives avail. 1 & 2 bdrm. adult bldg. only, N/S, No pets. 403-596-2444
4090
Homes
CROSS COUNTRY HOMES. Summer Clearance - Save over $15,000 on select show homes available for quick possession, or design your custom home for Fall possession. Visit us in Acheson. 780-470-8000.
Locomotive Mechanic (Edmonton) Cando Rail Services is seeking a Locomotive Mechanic to repair and service various types of locomotives. The work will be primarily in field environments and may require some travel. The Locomotive Mechanic will diagnose issues and make repairs to the locomotives along with taking responsibility for all locomotive inspections and preventative maintenance processes.
www.reddeerexpress.com e Squeezthe MOST out of your advertising dollars Place your ad in this newspaper and12345 province wide $
WE ARE “Your Total Rural Housing Solution” - Save up to $9000 on your Manufactured Home during our 45 Year Anniversary Celebration. Visit: www.Unitedhomescanada.com www.Grandviewmodular.com
Lots For Sale
Successful careers start here More than a job. Think career. Think ownership.
4070
Condos/ Townhouses
Careers
with a combined circulation of over 800,000 for only...
995 plus GST/HST
Value Ad Network
Alberta Weekly Newspapers Association toll free 1-800-282-6903 x228 email andrea@awna.com or visit this community newspaper
4160
include an Employee Group Benefits Plan and eligibility to participate in an Employee Ownership Plan. Fax: 204-725-4100 Email: employment@candoltd.com Visit: candoltd.com for more information.
Full time, permanent position. Benefits
YOUR ARCTIC ADVENTURE AWAITS JOB OPPORTUNITIES LOCATED IN NUNAVUT, NORTHWEST TERRITORIES AND YUKON:
Permanent or Relief/Contract
s Store, Retail or Grocery Managers & Assistant Managers s Cooks and Cook Managers
Arctic Co-operatives Limited (Arctic Co-ops) in Winnipeg, MB, supports 32 memberowned Co-ops in Nunavut, Northwest Territories and Yukon. The Co-ops operate retail businesses and hotels, gas bars and more.
Please send your resume to: HumanResources@Arctic.Coop Or fax to: 1-204-632-8575
View job descriptions on our website at: www.arctic.coop
SERGE’S HOMES
Lots Available in Lacombe, Blackfalds, Springbrook Custom build your dream home on your lot or ours. For more info. call OfÀce - 403-343-6360 Bob - 403-505-8050
5030
Cars
“If You’d Listed Here, You’d Be Sold Now!”
2003 Pontiac SunÀre, 2 dr., good cond. 403-352-6995
Thousands of folks who have sold their cars, homes and merchandise on our classified pages, know that the Classifieds work harder for you. And, so do all the people who have found cars, homes and bargains on our pages. Not to mention jobs, roommates, financial opportunities and more.
THE NORDIC
Next time you have something to advertise, put the Classifieds on the job. To place a Classified listing, call
Rental incentives avail. 1 & 2 bdrm. adult building, N/S, No pets. 403-596-2444
403-309-3300.
www.reddeerexpress.com
Service Directory
To advertise your service or business here, call 403.309.3300 Contractors
1100
BLACK CAT CONCRETE Garage/Patios/RV pads Sidewalks/Driveways Dean 403-505-2542
CONCRETE???
We’ll do it all...Free est. Call E.J. Construction Jim 403-358-8197
Financial
1170
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.
Value Home Repair Call 403-598-7499 R.D. Start your career! See Help Wanted Looking for a new pet? Check out Classifieds to find the purrfect pet.
Something for Everyone Everyday in Classifieds Classifieds Your place to SELL Your place to BUY
Legal Services
1260
CRIMINAL RECORD? Think: Canadian pardon. U.S. travel waiver. Divorce? Simple. Fast. Inexpensive. Debt recovery? Alberta collection to $25,000. Calgary 403-228-1300/ 1-800-347-2540. Start your career! See Help Wanted Classifieds...costs so little Saves you so much! Celebrate your life with a Classified ANNOUNCEMENT
Misc. Services
1290
Moving & Storage
1300
Personal Services
1315
CANADA BENEFIT MOVING? Boxes? Appls. SEEKING A CAREER in the Community Newspaper GROUP - Do you or removal. 403-986-1315 business? Post your someone you know suffer resume for FREE right from a disability? Get up Painters/ where the publishers are to $40,000 from the looking. Visit: Canadian Government. Decorators awna.com/for-job-seekers. Toll free 1-888-511-2250 or www.canadabeneÀt.ca/ JG PAINTING, 25 yrs. exp. Classifieds Free Est. 403-872-8888 free-assessment. Your place to SELL Your place to BUY LAUREL TRUDGEON REACH OVER 1 Million Residential Painting and Readers Weekly. Advertise Celebrate your life Colour Consultations. Province Wide ClassiÀeds. with a Classified 403-342-7801. Only $269 + GST (based ANNOUNCEMENT on 25 words or less). Looking for a place Call now for details to live? CELEBRATIONS 1-800-282-6903 ext. 228; Take a tour through the HAPPEN EVERY DAY www.awna.com. CLASSIFIEDS IN CLASSIFIEDS
1310
Roofing
1370
METAL ROOFING & SIDING. 32+ colours available at over 55 Distributors. 40 year warranty. 48 hour Express Service available at select supporting Distributors. Call 1-888-263-8254
Roofing
1370
PRECISE ROOFING LTD. 15 Yrs. Exp., Ref’s Avail. WCB covered, fully Licensed & Insured. 403-896-4869
Roofing
1370
QUALITY work at an affordable price. Joe’s RooÀng. Re-rooÀng specialist. Fully insured. Insurance claims welcome. 10 yr. warranty on all work. 403-350-7602
Yard Care
1430
YARD CARE Call Ryan @ 403-348-1459 Classifieds Your place to SELL Your place to BUY
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
RED DEER EXPRESS 31
View the Clues Contest
Read to Win!
Below are five phone numbers that appear inside our clients’ ads in this week’s Express (includes Special Features & Supplements)
Help Mr. H find the HOOK for his fishing rod.
Simply match the phone number to the business, fill out the contest form and drop it off at the Express office prior to draw deadline listed. Note: Express office is closed between noon and 1pm daily. 403-348-5422 1-888-296-0528 403-588-2392 403-888-5149 587-377-4797
H
________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ ________________________________ _________________________________
Enter in person at the Red Deer Express #121, 5301 - 43 St.
WIN A $25.00 GIFT CARD TO LAS PALMERAS 3630 50 Ave. • Red Deer, AB
403-346-8877
HOW TO PLAY:
DRAW DATE: SEPTEMBER 30TH @ NOON
ANSWER
Aug Winner: Carol Wulff Name: _______________________________________ Phone: _______________________________________ #121, 5301 - 43 St.
403-346-3356
X
CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Stoop part 5. Venomous snakes 9. ____ sauce 12. Hope 13. Coating 14. Color shade 15. As well 16. Mobile homes 18. Track events 20. Farm structure 21. Alcove 23. Rely 27. Drill part 29. Make an offer 31. Impede 32. Go over copy 34. Pond barrier 36. Eat
Copyright © 2016, Penny Press
Word of mouth is good
But
50,000
EYES ARE MUCH BETTER!
Don’t underestimate the power of our readers to help you grow your sales.
Call your Sales Rep. Today!
403.346.3356
37. Splits 39. Used a shovel 41. Teed off 42. Military gesture 44. Cold-cut shop 46. Lobster’s relative 48. Youth 51. Parcels 55. Skirt type 56. Meadow mama 57. Urgent request 58. Ingredient 59. Miniature 60. Dispatched 61. Wallet bills
Fill-in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the numbers 1 through 9 only once. Each 3x3 box is outlined with a darker line. You already have a few numbers to get you started. Remember: You must not repeat the numbers 1 through 9 in the same line, column or 3x3 box.
DOWN 1. Did the backstroke 2. Ceramic slab 3. Necessary 4. Snapshot 5. Fore-and-____ 6. Galahad and Gawain 7. Tartan 8. Said “cheese” 9. Not he 10. “____ Day Will Come” 11. Correct! 17. Ran easily 19. Cry 22. Child 24. Remove 25. Granny 26. Hid the gray
27. Wagers 28. Thought 30. Mom’s counterpart 33. Pickup, e.g. 35. Stick-in-the-____ 38. Binds 40. Diamond or pearl 43. National symbol 45. Boundary 47. Has-____ 49. Steers 50. Margins 51. Chapel bench 52. Shock 53. Third letter 54. Took a load
ANSWER
32 RED DEER EXPRESS
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2016
Back to School Sweeter just got
0%
%
0
*
Leas
g n i c n a
ing
Fin
#127985
2016 Corolla LE $ 20,133 or $58 /wk *
*
*
*
#G6026
2016 Rav4 LE AWD Upgrade $ 28,726 or $88 /wk *
*
*#127985 weekly payment over 84 months, 0.99%, $1000 down, O.A.C. Cost of borrowing is $711. Cash price includes $1000 cash rebate, price does not include applicable tax. #G6026 weekly payment over 84 months, 2.99%, $2000 down, O.A.C. Cash price includes $1000 cash rebate, price does not include applicable tax. 0% financing and 0% leasing available on #127985, O.A.C. Vehicles may not be exactly as shown. See dealer for full details.
“WHERE THE DEALS ARE” Plus Earn Bonus Aeroplan Miles
403.343.3736 • www.reddeertoyota.com • 1.800.662.7166