Cranbrook Daily Townsman, October 07, 2016

Page 1

FRIDAY

OCTOBER 7, 2016

Ice take > 3-goalie show on the road

A unique > Healing exhibition Earth Conference at Centre 64

Townsman Page 18

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Page 12

Cranbrook

Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1946

Vol. 70, Issue 146

Kelsey Thompson plays ‘Lucy,’ an autistic girl going through a time of tumultuous change — but not as much as her estranged mother. See more, Page 9

RCMP still seeking missing Daniel Ladd Cranbrook RCMP would like to express appreciation to the public for a number of tips already received as the investigation into the whereabouts of Daniel Ladd continues. This will continue to be

prioritized as a missing persons case. Cranbrook RCMP would like to reach out to Mr. Ladd to contact police or his family to confirm his safety. If you have any information on his whereabouts

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TRE VOR CR AWLEY

Barry Coulter photo

RCMP are still searching for Daniel Curtis Ladd, who was last seen by friend on August 19 before being reported missing by family members who are concerned for his safety.

INCLUDES G.S.T.

RDEK chair reflects on political conference

Journey to the Interior

FO R THE TOWN S MAN

1

$ 10

please call Cranbrook RCMP at 250-489-3471 or Crime Stoppers at 800-222-TIPS (8477). Information can also be relayed via web or text based tips with details on canadiancrimestoppers.org

While nothing earth-shattering came out of UBCM conference for the Regional District of East Kootenay, board chair Rob Gay says all board directors valued the experience. The annual conference of the Union of British Columbia Municipalities allows civic politicians to network with provincial cabinet ministers to lobby for funding and support. One of the key announcements from Premier Christy Clark during her keynote address was the creation of a Clean Water and Wastewater Fund with $148 million in funding. The funding formula was also changed, as all three levels of government — local, provincial and federal — pitch in 33 per cent, however, that formula is now 17 per cent for local government, 33 per cent for provincial, and 50 per cent for federal. “In the past when we did water and sewer projects,” said Gay, “the

formula was usually one-third, one-third and one third with local government, the province and the feds. “She’s [Christy Clark] has come out and said now that our share would be 17 [per cent] so that’s pretty significant when it comes to taxes and whatnot.” Gay held meetings with Energy and Mines Minister Bill Bennett regarding the Elko Dam project which BC Hydro has currently put on hold. Other meetings included the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations on Fireworks, Land Tenure Applications and the Southern Rocky Mountain Management Plan. Gay and RDEK board directors also met with the the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure on some highway issues and with the Ministry of Jobs, Tourism and Skills Training on branding and marketing in the Columbia Valley.

See RDEK, Page 4

NEW COMMERCIAL AND PERSONAL MEMBERS WELCOME! Members new to credit unions could be eligible for $200 through the Get your Share Program

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Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Page 2 Friday, October 7, 2016

Streamkeeper program launching in Kimberley Jim Duncan

Mainstreams is launching a Streamkeeper program in Kimberley which will focus on keeping riparian vegetation healthy in our watershed. Riparian vegetation grows on the banks of creeks and is vital in pre-

venting erosion and in retaining water on the land. The riparian is also a good defense against extreme weather events such as prolonged rainstorms or days of rain on wet snow. Thanks to funding from Columbia Basin Trust, our first Stream-

keeper program begins after Thanksgiving and will run three Saturdays in a row (for one-hour) beginning Saturday, Oct. 22 at Open Gate Garden on Rotary next to the pool at 10 a.m. The Trust has funded Mainstreams’ water education program for over ten years. Mainstreams, based in Kimberley, has been teaching in schools and at community events in the Columbia Basin since 2003. No question that young families are very busy. We decided to create a program for them to see what it would be like to have babies to grandparents show up and join in the fun. Because we want both dads and moms to

The CSCL employs over 130 employees (full-time, parttime, and casual) and supports over 110 individuals within the East Kootenays.

Photo by Dave Quinn

Creek Science at Gymnastics Camp. come, the programs are on Saturdays and because we know how precious weekends are, the sessions are onehour each. We apologize to those of you who work Saturdays. You

HEALING EARTH

will be pleased to know that we are planning a couple of mid-week evening programs after New Year! Please watch for more details after Thanksgiving.

Orthodox Christian Perspectives On Ecology & Climate Change

FREE Intro Lectures and Q & A Session Thursday Oct. 13 at 6:00 pm Conference Oct 14 -15 at the Royal Alexander Hall Conference Themes Include: Discovering God’s presence in all cultures Discovering God through Beauty Listening to creation – Christ as revealed through creation Discovering the voice of nature

Fee subsidy help available upon request

Conference Fees $160 (includes breakfast and lunch) For more information visit www.saintaidan.ca or call Father Andrew 250-420-1582

CSCL marks 6oth anniversay with gala celebration Submit ted

Cranbrook Society for Community Living will be hosting a Gala Celebration for their 60th anniversary on October 22. It will be held in the elegant Pavilion at St. Eugene Golf Resort and Casino and will include a sumptuous dinner followed by dancing to local band Canadian Crossfire. The Celebration will begin at 5 pm with dinner being served at 6 pm. St. Eugene Golf Resort & Casino is our cor-

looking after you from the inside out.

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porate sponsor for the evening which will showcase events of the past 60 years in the Community Inclusion movement. There will be a Silent Auction during the event and a cash bar is available. It is with great pride that the Cranbrook Society for Community Living (CSCL) is celebrating Sixty Years of Inclusion this year to mark our 60th anniversary. Established in 1956 by a group of local parents who wanted inclusion for their children with disabilities, CSCL has been supporting individuals with disabilities and diverse needs ever since. We are a non-profit as well as a registered charity — supporting children, youth and adults with a diverse realm of intellectual and physical impairments. Currently we employ over 130 employees (full-time, part-time, and casual) and support over 110 individuals within the East Kootenays. CSCL is proud to contribute to the local economy by way of employment and local purchasing. Throughout 2016 we have celebrated our existence, and importance, within our community. To wind-down the festivities and draw a closing to our year of celebration, we proudly invite the community to join in our celebration on October 22nd. Tickets can be purchased online at www. cranbrookscl.ca or in person at 22 – 14 Avenue South, Cranbrook. On behalf of the Board of Directors and Management Staff, we thank you for your dedicated support over the past 60 years. We look forward to promoting inclusion within our community for many years to come.


Cranbrook Townsman

Friday, October 7, 2016 Page 3

The Week On The Beat

Cranbrook RCMP respond to 192 calls over past week F O R T H E TOW N S M A N

Cranbrook RCMP responded to 192 calls for service over a busy past week, September 26 (6 a.m.) to October 3 (6 a.m.), according to a press release from Staff Sergeant Hector Lee. • One impaired driver was nabbed — an alcohol-related cases. • Five collisions were reported, four within the city — drivers was charged in three of the incidents. Another collision involved a deer in town. The fifth collision involved a deer outside city limits. There was no major damage or injuries in these collisions • There was one hitand-run incident reported. A parked, unattended vehicle was hit by another car. Traces

of orange paint were left behind by the suspect vehicle. • 19 mental health calls were reported. Nine individuals were apprehended. • There were six assault complaints. Four of these were domestic in nature — arrests were made in two of these incidents. • 13 thefts were reported. Three were vehicle thefts, with two of these being recovered within a day of being reported stolen. The other is still outstanding, a blue 1998 Ford F150 XLT, BC License Plate KB2056. RCMP remind drivers to not leave their keys in the vehicle, it may affect your insurance claim.

Two of the thefts were of bicycles — neither were locked up. One has been recovered and returned to owner Five thefts were from vehicles in various places in town. One male was arrested after being found rummaging through a vehicle. He found was in possession of stolen property and later released on conditions to attend court for various charges. This person was not responsible for all the thefts that were reported. • Five Break and Enters were reported this week past: - One attempted break and enter into Tamarack Mall.

- One break and enter to a business on Theatre Rd — nothing stolen. - One attempted break and enter to Fort Steele Resort and RV Park. - One break and enter tino the Jaffray Pump and Pantry; car wash coin machines were broken into and an undisclosed amount of change was taken. - One break and enter into the attached garage of a residence; the vehicle inside was rummaged through and jackets were stolen RCMP believe that all the break and enters reported, as well as some of the thefts, are related to each other. Credit cards were stolen from inside one of

Boil water order lifted Wednesday SUBMIT TED

The boil water notice issued on Monday for a small, localized area in the City has been officially rescinded by Interior Health this morn-

ing. Public Works received confirmation late Wednesday morning, October 5, that the water samples taken on Monday October 3, 2015 are

clear of any coliform bacteria. Residents living on Anderson Crescent and 21st Avenue South, between 2nd Street South and 2nd Street North in-

cluding the apartment buildings adjacent to Victoria Avenue and 2nd Street North were the only people affected by the boil water notice. Those affected can expect to find notices in their doors or mailboxes from the City advising that the boil water notice has been rescinded.

the vehicles and used at several local businesses. RCMP is continuing to investigate and hope to have the suspects identified in the near future. • There were seven

report of property damage. Charges are forthcoming in one of these incidents. • Four drug seizures were reported this week past — marijuana. • One drug traffick-

ing charge was laid marijuana • There were 22 false alarms/false 911 complaints. • Four people was arrested for intoxication in public place.

Man arrested on child porn possession charges RCMP

Cranbrook RCMP have a man in custody following a lengthy child pornography investigation. Earlier this summer Cranbrook RCMP received information from BC ICE (Integrated Child Exploitation Unit) that they had intercepted two videos that they believed were child pornography. Through a Cyber Investigation, Cranbrook GIS was able to obtain information to search a Cranbrook residence and to seize computers from within. A review of the footage on the computer revealed Child Pornography. A 42-year-old Cranbrook resident was arrested and remains in

custody at this time to be dealt with before the courts on charges of Possession of Child Pornography. The Cranbrook RCMP would like the public to know that there is nothing in this investigation to indicate that any local children were involved.

“The Cranbrook RCMP works closely with other units such as BC ICE in order to keep children safe,” said Cst. Katie Forgeron of the Cranbrook We are satisfied that charges were laid in this instance but concerned that people are still exploiting children in this way.”

HOLIDAY CLOSURE College of the Rockies will be closed

Monday, October 10 for Thanksgiving Cranbrook Main Campus regular hours of operation: Monday to Friday: 7:00 am - 10:00 pm Saturday: 9:00 am - 4:00 pm Sunday: 12:00 pm - 4:00 pm

cotr.ca

A GOOD PLACE TO BE.

EYE ON YOUR CITY

Brownbag Lunch with Mayor McCormick - On Wednesday, October 12th, and on the second Wednesday of each month, Mayor McCormick will host a brown-bag luncheon at City Hall from noon until 1:30 pm. Bring your lunch and have a discussion with the Mayor.

EKFH Executive Director, Cassandra Schwarz joins BPNS Organizing Committee, Pat Spring (left), Trevor Gordon, Don MacMillan and Colin Sinclair.

BPNS Charity Golf nets $15,225 for MRI Campaign SUBMIT TED

The fifth Annual Boston Pizza Northstar GM Charity Golf Tournament was held on August 19th. It was another amazing year for the Tournament, raising over $15,000 to support the MRI: An Image of Health campaign to bring a permanent MRI to the East Kootenay. Generous sponsors who supported each and every hole, a full field of golfers, generous auction donations and the dedicated volunteer hole spotters are what made the 18 par 3’s a rousing success yet again. Trevor Gordon, Boston Pizza and Pat Spring, Northstar GM, both said, “We have had a great time over the past five years hosting this event. It is wonderful to see the impact our community can have when we come together for a day of golf for an amazing cause. We are thrilled to be able to

contribute to bring the much needed permanent MRI to our region.” Over the past five years the BPNS Tournament has raised over $90,000 to improve healthcare in the East Kootenay. This amazing contribution to healthcare could not have been possible without the outstanding commitment and dedication of signature sponsors, Boston Pizza and North Star GM. “It is truly inspiring to see what the organizing committee for the BPNS Golf Tournament has been able to accomplish over the past five years,” said Cassandra Schwarz, EKFH Executive Director. “Through their hard work to support health are we are almost at the point of offering truly regional healthcare in the East Kootenay and with this contribution.”

Fire Prevention Week Open House – On Thursday, October 13th from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. the Kimberley Fire Department will be hosting an open house with interactive demonstrations, truck tours, and games. Stop by the Kimberley Fire Station #1, 340 Spokane Street to check out the fun! There will Thanksgiving Closure – City Hall and the Works Yard will be be hot dogs and refreshments, along with a visit closed Monday, October 10th for Thanksgiving, with the Aquatic from Sparky the Fire Dog. Centre opening from 1:00 – 4:00 p.m. for a Public Swim. The Regular Meeting of Council is rescheduled to Tuesday, October Don’t Wait, Check the Date! - Smoke alarms are a critical component in home fire safety planning. 11th at 7 p.m. The 2016 Fire Prevention Week theme is “Don’t Wait, Waste that is scheduled to be picked up on Monday, October 10th Check the Date” on your smoke alarm. will be picked up on Tuesday, October 11th. For more information please call the Operations & Environment Services Department According to an NFPA report, in one-fifth (20 percent) of all U.S. homes with smoke alarms, the smoke at 250.427.9660. Happy Thanksgiving from all City staff! alarms aren’t working; three out of five home fire 2017 Community Grants - The 2017 Community Grant Application deaths result from fires in properties without smoke forms are now available on the City’s website at www.kimberley. alarms (38 percent) or with no working smoke ca. The deadline to submit an application is October 15th. Please alarms (21 percent). note that all 2016 grant recipients must complete a final report There is a general assumption that simply having a to be considered for a 2017 Community Grant. smoke alarm will offer us enough safety. The truth Speed Signs – The City of Kimberley is urging motorists to please is that regular testing, maintenance and replacing obey all road speed signs within City limits. Please be extra cautious older alarms is required to give us the best odds in school and playground zones, as school is now back in session. of escaping a fire. Outdoor Burning - All outdoor burning within the City of Kimberley is regulated under Bylaw No. 2364 and must be approved by the Kimberley Fire Department. Special occasion burning permits will be issued by the Fire Chief for fires in parks or recreation areas, burns for land clearing, and for approved barbeque pits for cooking purposes. It is unlawful to burn without a permit, to burn construction materials, to burn yard debris, or to burn in an outside barrel or outside incinerator. All approved burning within the City of Kimberley must be supervised at all times and have sufficient equipment on site to extinguish or control the burn.

Smoke alarms should be replaced at or before they reach ten years of age. Most smoke alarms have a manufactured date on the back or in the battery housing. Some manufacturers have even gone as far as putting a best before date on them or building in an audible warning when they reach a certain age. For more information please visit: http://www2.gov. bc.ca/gov/content/safety/emergency-preparednessresponse-recovery/fire-safety/public-education/ fire-prevention-week.

340 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC V1A 2E8 I Tel: 250.427.5311 I Fax: 250.427.5252 I Kimberley.ca


Page 4 Friday, October 7, 2016

Cranbrook townsman

Local News

RDEK director reflects on UBCM mission Continued from page 1 Gay said he had an interesting conversation with representatives from the Agriculture Land Commission (ALC) in regards to land boundary reviews within the RDEK that should and shouldn’t be a part of the Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR). The ALC has the authority to designate which land should and shouldn’t be a part of the ALR, but land with-

Lost someone? Need an understanding ear? Drop in grief chat with trained volunteers. For information call 250-417-2019, or Toll Free 1-855-417-2019. www.ckhospice.com A service of Cranbrook Kimberley Hospice Society

in the ALR is eligible for certain tax breaks. “The legislation has changed now in the fact that everybody that’s been identified in Area B and Area C will get a letter and they’ll get the choice if they want to stay or go out,” Gay said. “We had quite a heated debate out in Wasa about it.” “In Meadowbrook, generally, the large pieces the ALC would like to see in, want out, and the smaller pieces, the people would like to stay in because they get the tax break and they’re probably doing a little

bit of hobby-farming, so there’s a bit of a push and pull there.” Gay is hoping to have some delegates from the ALC come before an RDEK board meeting in November or December to add more clarity to the issue. The electric highway and the challenge of using electric vehicles in rural areas was another topic that Gay personally got to address, as he led a meeting on the subject. Using electric vehicles and building charging stations in urban areas is easier because of the available

Cranbrook Food Bank Annual General Meeting Monday, October 17, 2016 2:00 p.m. Food Bank Building 104 8th Avenue South

Everyone Welcome!

LEARN THE SIGNS OF STROKE

is it drooping?

infrastructure than it is in rural areas, he said. “I was trying to paint the picture that an urban area, you can go maximum density, buses and light transit and that stuff,” Gay said. “It works, there’s no question about it, but in our area, I talked about how they’ve consolidat-

ed services like hospitals to regional centres, so people in Fernie, Creston, Invermere — they need their cars to get around.” According to Gay, 60 per cent of greenhouse gas emissions in B.C. come from transportation, while residents in the Kootenays spend

is it slurred or jumbled?

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ACT BECAUSE THE QUICKER YOU ACT, THE MORE OF THE PERSON YOU SAVE.

T r e vo r C r aw l e y

There are all kinds of ways to fundraise for a charitable cause, from bottle drives, to running to raffle draws. However, for the third straight year, Extra Life Game Day is hoping to continue their success of raising money for the Alberta Children’s Hospital in Calgary by busting out board games, video game consoles, card

games and more for a day of fun at the Eagles Hall on Satruday, Oct. 15 from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for kids 12 years of age and under. It’s an event that has grown, both in participation and funds raised since it first began three years ago, on the efforts of Dave Miller, Jeff Johnson and other vol-

Congratulations to our

CARRIER OF THE MONTH Sean Keitch

Sean enjoys Kootenay ice games, & delivering papers to his customers.

As a valued member of our team, our carrier of the month will receive a $25 gift card from Save On Foods/Overwaitea

© Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, 2014

unteers. Last year, the event raised over $4,300 and organizers have a ton of games lined up and over $10,000 in prizes available through silent auction or door prizes. Prizes will be doled out in a variety of ways. Prizes will be available for winners of three different Super Smash Bros tournaments and a Super Mario 3 score attack. Other video-gamethemed events will also give participants the chance to win some prizes. Lockdown Cranbrook Escape Rooms will have a presence with two ‘escape pods’ and local video game developers — Flying Helmet Games —will be showing off Eon Altar Chapter 2. For specific gaming action, there will be tons of options to choose from. First, there will be almost every single gaming system imaginable, which will include the ever-popular Retro Alley — a wall dedicated to old-time gaming

systems such as the Atari and Original NES. A card table will be going all day with poker, black jack and go fish if the dealer feels like it. Other card games include Magic: The Gathering, Pokemon and Yu-Gi-Oh that will be going on, in conjunction with board games, spread out over 20 tables. Kids will also have a dedicated area complete with colouring books, puzzles, Netflix, and pinatas. Raising money for the Alberta Children’s Hospital hits close to home for Miller, whose son, Alexander, received treatment for cardiomyopathy— where the heart grows to an abnormal size—at the Stollery Children’s Hospital in Edmonton. Though Alexander received treatment in Edmonton, the funds raised from Extra Life Game Day will go to the Alberta Children’s Hospital in Calgary, as local kids in the East Kootenay region will likely head there first for treatment.

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Gay. “She should be the president next year, which would be good for the East Kootenay to have a director in that role, and that’s a big job, but even this year is busy for her,” said Gay. Booth also serves as vice-chair for the RDEK.

Giving a one-up to Extra Life Game Day

Carrier for the Cranbrook Townsman

can you raise both?

over $400 million on fuel every year. Wendy Booth, the Area F Director, was promoted on the executive committee, running unopposed from second vice president to first vice president. Having an East Kootenay voice on the committee is a boon, said

Please help us show appreciation by letting us know if your carrier is doing a great job! Call Karrie Hall, Circulation 250-426-5201, ext. 208 or email karrie.hall@cranbrooktownsman.com

CELEBRATING 27YRS

of building beautiful homes in the Kootenays

Protect our earth. The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the Kimberley Daily Bulletin promote recycling. We use vegetable-based inks, and our newsprint, tin and aluminum waste is recycled.


Cranbrook townsman

Friday, October 7, 2016 Page 5

Local News

Positive investment leads at UBCM: Pratt Trevor Crawley Cranbrook Mayor Lee Pratt came away encouraged for the future after attending an annual conference of municipal and provincial elected officials in Victoria this weekend. The Union of British Columbia Municipalities’ annual convention includes mayors, councillors and provincial cabinet ministers, where civic politicians can network with each other and senior levels of government to tackle issues. Pratt updated city council about UBCM meetings at a meeting on Monday night, noting that there was some positive talks with at least four companies and stakeholders, but didn’t delve into too much detail. “I brought it up because you want to let people know that there’s things happening,” Pratt said, after the meeting. “…I can tell you this,

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the meetings that we had were very productive, very supportive. They’re offering help with us with information and what we have to do to make it happen, so they’re becoming stakeholders and partners in it and giving us that guidance.” Pratt attended the UBCM conference along with councillors Tom Shypitka, Ron Popoff, and Wes Graham. David Kim, Cranbrook’s Chief Administration Officer, also attended. Networking with mayors, councillors and provincial cabinet ministers is helping draw in potential investment opportunities, said Pratt. “International trade and major investment branch — these are people who come and maybe want to manufacture something in B.C., so they need 15 acres of land and $30 million they’re willing to invest and build a

plant or whatever,” Pratt said. “We want them to know, talk to us, because land is not cheap in the Lower Mainland and that’s the big stumbling block right now. So they need to know that we have the land, water, power, sewer, zoning — everything that those people need, we have. “But they haven’t been told that, so now they’re working with us, we’re on the list and we’ve made a lot of progress.”

Small

Business&

Craft Fair Cranbrook United Church

Fri & Sat, Oct 14th-15th 10am – 4pm

All are welcome Interested in table call 250-426-2022 or email office@cranbrookunited.com $15-30 per table Space is limited so call early.

FREE BRA CLINIC Thursday, October 13 3:30 to 8:30 pm Ricki’s at Tamarack Mall Cranbrook

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IDLEWILD PARK DRAFT MASTER PLAN FEEDBACK Ideas and priorities we heard from Cranbrook citizens, stakeholders, and staff has been crafted into a draft Master Plan for Idlewild Park. If you missed out on the open house on September 20th, you are still able to provide feedback on the draft plan. Information provided at the open house can be downloaded from our website @ www.cranbrook.ca, or a hard copy can be viewed at City Hall or the administration office at Western Financial Place. Hard copies of the comment form are also available at these locations, or can be filled out on line by visiting http://fluidsurveys.com/surveys/urbansouthcoast/idlewild-master-plan/ Please provide your feedback before Monday October 10, 2016. We hope you will share your perspectives on the future of Idlewild Park. If you have questions, please contact: Chris New Director of Leisure Services Phone: 250-489-0251 chris.new@cranbrook.ca

“We go with the approach that we want to be a partner with you and find the solution and work towards that,” Pratt said. “So they like that.”

Much of the time, mayors and councillors are meeting with provincial ministers with their hands out, but Pratt says that’s not always the case with Cranbrook.

CRANBROOK

e H e al th C a r AUXILIARY

Thrift Store Fashion Show GNO - Girls Night Out

Proceeds to Fund Permanent MRI @ EKRH

Thursday, Oct. 13, 2016 @ The Heritage Inn Doors Open @ 6pm Show Starts @ 7pm TICKETS $25

(Includes a glass of wine or beer & appetizers) TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE THRIFT STORE ON 8TH AVE OR AT THE HOSPITAL GIFT SHOP

FOR TABLE RESERVATIONS Contact Kate Fox 250-417-2746 or by email katefox1@telus.net (Tickets must be purchased prior to reserving a table)

Don’t miss out on an evening filled with fun and surprises!

Raffle Draws, 50/50 Draws & Door Prizes

Sherry Jones Townsman Carrier

Sherry likes doing papers to meet new people, and to get her exercise while she visits her little dog buddies. As valued members of our team our carriers will receive a gift package from McDonalds Cranbrook and a movie pass for 2 from Columbia Theatre

Landmark CINEMAS

Delivering door-to-door in all kinds of weather can be a challenging task, however every week and for more than one hundred years, we have carriers that do just that! Please help us show appreciation by letting us know if your carrier is doing a great job!

Call Karrie Hall, Circulation 250-426-5201, ext. 208 or email karrie.hall@cranbrooktownsman.com

Protect our earth. The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the Kimberley Daily Bulletin promote recycling. We use vegetable-based inks, and our newsprint, tin and aluminum waste is recycled.

STATEMENT OF 2017 PROPERTY TAX EXEMPTIONS Following adoption of City of Cranbrook Annual Taxation Exemption Bylaw No. 3880, 2016, the following properties will be provided a permissive property tax exemption by City Council for the year 2017 in accordance with as per sections 224(2)(a) and 224(2)(g) of the Community Charter. Roll 259.000 288.000 889.000 1118.000 1121.000 1190.000 1197.000 1309.000 1310.000 1312.050 1520.000 1522.000 1524.000 1595.001 3479.000 4673.500 4675.000 4748.000 5199.000 5961.025 8829.010 8850.000 8852.000 10189.000 18008.000 18008.015 18010.000 18010.500

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Property Address. . . . . . . . . . . Property Tax Exemption Recipient . . . . . Estimated Municipal Property Tax Exemption 219 - 15TH AVENUE SOUTH . . . . . . . .Fred Scott Rotary Villa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $504.00 202 - 13TH AVENUE SOUTH . . . . . . . .Ktunaxa Nation Council Society . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,818.00 125 - 10TH AVENUE SOUTH (94%) . . .Summit Community Services Society . . . . . . . . . . $8,854.00 39 - 13TH AVENUE SOUTH . . . . . . . . .Canadian Mental Health Association . . . . . . . . . . $5,835.00 45 - 13TH AVENUE SOUTH . . . . . . . . .Canadian Mental Health Association . . . . . . . . . . $1,256.00 1007 BAKER STREET . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ktunaxa/Kinbasket Child & Family . . . . . . . . . . . $6,906.00 11 - 11TH AVENUE SOUTH . . . . . . . . .Cranbrook Community Theatre Society . . . . . . . . . $4,090.00 42 - 7TH AVENUE SOUTH . . . . . . . . . .Cranbrook & District Search & Rescue Society . . . . . $544.00 38 - 7TH AVENUE SOUTH . . . . . . . . . .Cranbrook & District Search & Rescue Society . . . . . $7,371.00 36 - 7TH AVENUE SOUTH . . . . . . . . . .Cranbrook & District Search & Rescue Society . . . . . $544.00 16 - 12TH AVENUE NORTH (95%) . . . .Community Connections Society of Southeast BC . . . . $10,507.00 20 - 12TH AVENUE NORTH . . . . . . . . .Community Connections Society of Southeast BC . . . . $7,158.00 22 - 12TH AVENUE NORTH . . . . . . . . .Community Connections Society of Southeast BC . . . . $4,273.00 20 - 14TH AVENUE NORTH . . . . . . . . .Key City Theatre Society . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $21,783.00 1100 - 11TH STREET SOUTH . . . . . . .Summit Community Services Society . . . . . . . . . . $2,543.00 19 - 15TH AVENUE SOUTH . . . . . . . . .Cranbrook Society for Community Living . . . . . . . . $31,775.00 1500 - 1ST STREET SOUTH (50%) . . .Cranbrook Society for Community Living . . . . . . . . $2,182.00 46 - 17TH AVENUE SOUTH . . . . . . . . .Ktunaxa Nation Council Society . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,807.00 1601/1603 - 6TH STREET NORTH . . .Rocky Mountain Housing Society . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,741.00 572 INDUSTRIAL ROAD B . . . . . . . . . .Cranbrook Food Bank Society . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7,718.00 2304 - 4TH STREET NORTH . . . . . . .Cranbrook Society for Community Living . . . . . . . . $2,449.00 KOOTENAY STREET NORTH . . . . . . . .Christian & Missionary Alliance . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,536.00 KOOTENAY STREET NORTH . . . . . . . .Christian & Missionary Alliance . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1,289.00 629 - 6TH STREET NW . . . . . . . . . . .Cranbrook Christian School Society . . . . . . . . . . . $2,248.00 57 VAN HORNE STREET SOUTH . . . . .Cranbrook Archives Museum & Landmark Foundation . . $1,741.00 75 VAN HORNE STREET SOUTH . . . . .Cranbrook Archives Museum & Landmark Foundation . . $30,495.00 1 VAN HORNE STREET NORTH . . . . . .Cranbrook Archives Museum & Landmark Foundation . . $1,386.00 CP R/W LEASE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Cranbrook Archives Museum & Landmark Foundation . . $1,300.00


Page 6 Friday, October 7, 2016

OPINION

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The problem with referendums

P

resident Juan Manuel Santos was not obliged to hold a referendum to ratify the deal to end sixty years of war between the Colombian government and FARC (the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia). It was held because both Santos and the FARC leaders thought a referendum victory would make it harder for any later government to break the deal — but they lost the referendum. In Sunday’s referendum, slightly more than a third of qualified Colombian voters (37 percent) actually bothered to cast a ballot — and the ‘No’ side won by a sliver-thin majority of 50.2 percent. The ‘Yes’ side, however, got large majorities in the more rural parts of the country that had been devastated by the long war. In the war zones, most people just wanted the killing to stop, but in the safer urban areas people had the luxury of wondering whether it was morally justifiable to grant an amnesty to rebels who had killed so many people. And as in most referendums, lots of people seized the chance to make a protest vote against the government in general. So the peace deal was lost. There is no Plan B. “If the public says ‘No,’ the process stops and there will be no result,” chief government negotiator Humberto de la Calle told Colombia’s El Tiempo newspaper. “The consequence of ‘No’ winning is war,” said former President Cesar Gaviria, who led the campaign for the ‘Yes’ vote. That may be too pessimistic, for FARC’s leaders really do want to end the war. “If ‘No’ wins, it wouldn’t mean that the process has to fall apart,” guerrilla negotiator Carlos Antonio Lozada said in late June. “We aren’t required by law to decide to

continue such a painful war.” But without the legal protection of the peace deal, many of FARC’s 5,000 fighters will be reluctant to lay down their weapons and come out of the jungle. Why did Santos take the risk of a referendum? Neither the Colombian constitution nor any other country’s says that peace agreements ending civil wars must be ratified by a referendum. (National constitutions do Gwynne not even consider the possibility of a civil war.) And Dyer when civil wars do end, most governments recognise that emotions are still too raw to put necessary concessions like an amnesty for all the combatants to a popular vote. At the end of the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa, Nelson Mandela won the country’s first one-person-one-vote election, but he did not hold a referendum asking the voters to approve the agreement he had negotiated with the white minority regime. Instead he created the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, where those who had committed atrocities were asked to admit their crimes, but were not punished. There was no referendum held to ratify the Good Friday Agreement of 1998 that effectively ended the 30-year civil war in Northern Ireland. Nobody asked the Lebanese people to approve the diplomatic Taif Agreement of 1989 that led to an end of the fifteen-year civil war there, and it was the Lebanese parliament, not a referendum, that passed the amnesty law. A referendum is a very blunt instrument even when the question at issue is less tangled and emotional than a civil war. In the recent referendum on British membership in the European Union, for example, most of the 51.9 percent who voted to leave were really voting against

mass immigration (half of which does not come from the EU) and against the impact of globalisation on their living standards. It’s also easy for a government to write a referendum question that gets the answer it wants. In the Hungarian referendum (also last Sunday) on whether or not to accept some of the refugees who arrive in the European Union, for example, the question was: “Do you want the European Union to be able to mandate the obligatory resettlement of non-Hungarian citizens into Hungary even without the approval of the National Assembly?” It might as well have read: “Do you want to abandon Hungarian sovereignty and let the EU resettle terrorists here?” Ultra-nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban wanted a ‘No’, and he got it: 98 percent of those who voted said ‘No’. (But more than half of the electorate didn’t vote at all, possibly out of contempt for Orban’s blatant attempt to manipulate public opinion.) Then there was the Greek referendum of July last year, when Prime Minister Tsipras asked the public if it accepted the tough conditions of an EU offer to bail Greece out of a debt crisis once more. He wanted a ‘No’ and he got it (61 percent ‘No’, 39 percent ‘Yes) — but ten days later he ignored the result and agreed to an even harsher offer from the EU. And got away with it. Referendums are usually “advisory” and do not have the force of law. They rarely have an outcome that could not be achieved by a simple vote in an elected parliament at a hundredth of the cost. And a democratically elected parliament does a much better job of asking and answering the right question. Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist based in London


Cranbrook Townsman / Kimberley Bulletin

OPINION/EVENTS

What’s Up?

LETTERS to the EDITOR

Fast action

I witnessed an accident at the driveway to the Safeway Gas Bar on July 28. A man in a motorized wheelchair had approached from the direction of Baker Street and 12th Avenue and mistakenly thought there was a ramp leading straight off the sidewalk to the other side of the driveway. The front wheels of the chair dropped down, he was thrown from his chair to the pavement and pavement and appeared to be unconscious. Four men and I came to his aid. The man regained consciousness and was able to sit up. He was bleeding profusely from a head wound. Medics quickly arrived, and the man was able to get back into his chair unaided. I wrote to the CEO of Safeway/Sobeys expressing my concern for the safety of this site. A few days later, Mr. Dave Rodych phoned to say he had reviewed the security tapes and interviewed employees. He thanked me for identifying a problem that the company did not know existed. Mr. Rodych promised to fix the sidewalk immediately. He also ordered an engineering review of the safety of all Safeway/Sobeys properties and instituted employee perimeter walks. New sidewalk ramps have already been installed. On behalf of the citizens and customers who use that sidewalk I’d like to publicly thank Mr. Rodych and Safeway/Sobeys for acting so promptly and for being such good corporate citizens. Gladys Molnar Cranbrook

Fire Prevention Week

With Fire Prevention Week approaching, Cranbrook Fire & Emergency Services would like to remind residents that fire safety should be considered and practiced every day. Three common prevention tips associated with fire safety are to ensure smoke alarms are installed inside and outside of bedrooms, develop and practice an exit plan and close bedroom doors when sleeping. You may want to consider installing self-closing hinges on bedroom doors to ensure a level of protection from heat, fire and smoke. All three of these tips are practices that can save your life should a fire occur.

New Underwriter Laboratories research shows that sleeping with doors closed can keep smoke out of a room longer, as well as change the flow of heat and toxic gases, acting as a shield for someone trapped and unable to get out of a fire. What a lot of people do not realize is that the dynamics of structure fires have changed significantly in past decades. Today’s homes are built with lighter construction materials, have more open floor areas and an increase use and quantity of more flammable synthetic materials. Consider the fact that new research has shown that heat release rates of some common furnishings are over five times; that today’s fires produce 200 times as much smoke; and that homes burn eight times faster than in past decades. Recent building codes have acknowledged this change by requiring smoke alarms in all bedrooms and hallways outside bedrooms, to expedite early warning to occupants. To-date, they have not dealt with isolating the smoke, fire and heat from a sleeping room. It makes sense that the next step for the life safety of occupants who are sleeping, is to require closures on bedroom doors. In response, the fire service has modified training standards, response procedures and strategies and tactics to adapt to the new realities of firefighting risks and challenges. Recognizing the fire service’s need to adapt to modern fire behaviour, I believe it’s only logical for the homeowner and occupants to practice a higher level of prevention than in the past. It’s an old message, but more important now than ever, close your bedroom door. Chief Wayne Price, Director, Cranbrook Fire & Emergency Services City of Cranbrook

Reform

This issue is really important! Under our current “First Past The Post” electoral system and in a four-party race, it is possible for one party with less than 30 per cent of the national vote to occupy 100 per cent of the seats in Parliament. Obviously a situation that cries out for correction. Bud Abbott Cranbrook

Site C, our latest global villain

W

e’ve just had the latest round of international “news” about British Columbia as a global environmental outlaw. On top of our oil tankers (almost all from Alaska), our “fracking” (conducted without significant incident for 50 years), and our reckless abandonment of “climate leadership” in lawless, planet-roasting Canada, B.C. has been summoned to the great green prisoner’s dock for the heinous offence of constructing a third hydroelectric dam on the Peace River. This time the international protest network has called for a United Nations investigation of the Site C dam, claiming it will cause irreparable harm to the Athabasca River basin and Wood Buffalo National Park. Things are so bad from the first two dams on the Peace that a third one might cause Wood Buffalo to be struck from UNESCO’s list of world heritage sites! That’s like 50 UN “fossil awards” and a Neil Young concert all at once! There’s just one problem. It’s bunk. These things follow a formula. Press conference in Ottawa as UN delegation tours, looking for things to protest in safe countries – check. Emotional aboriginal leader with unsupported allegations of environmental ruin – check. Campaign orchestrated by U.S. enviros, in this case the “Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative” – check. Story

Friday, October 7, 2016 Page 7

timed for that hard-to-fill Monday news hole, delivered to every radio and TV station by the copy-hungry Canadian Press wire service and hyped by a veteran protester-reporter at The Globe and Mail? Check. Now it’s quite true that the three-year federal assessment of the Site C project pointed to significant impacts, such as the loss of farmland and hunting and trapping areas in the Peace River valley in northeastern B.C. But after an exhaustive examination of the hydraulic effects of Site C, it was determined there would be no measurable impact on the Peace-Athabasca BC VIEWS Delta, more than 1,000 km away in northern Alberta and Tom the Northwest Territories. Fletcher Of course all Canadian environmental reviews are skewed and flawed in some unspecified way, according to the professional environmentalists who stack hearings until they have to be constrained from doing so. I’ve covered our Left Coast environment movement for decades, starting out as a long-haired Suzuki-worshipping reporter and slowly coming to appreciate what a cynical industry it has become. But I’ve never seen anything quite like the anti-Site C campaign. It’s bad enough watching NDP leader John Horgan and Green Party leader Andrew Weaver twist themselves into knots to maintain opposition to a renewable energy

project. Their core urban supporters are hard-wired to oppose any industrial development, and today’s instant information culture manufactures ‘facts’ to fit the current narrative. It takes real political flexibility to tout adoption of electric cars, then try to block the only option other than nuclear reactors that would support the expansion. Wading through my daily shipment of shocked and appalled environmental-group press releases, I almost slipped off my chair when Amnesty International started sending out anti-Site C diatribes. Good to know the plight of political prisoners from Cuba to Iran has been relieved to the point where Amnesty is able to stand with the dozens of other donation-seeking organizations against this dam. The environmental case for Site C is related to the economic case. It will generate more power with a smaller reservoir than any other dam in Canada, being the third stop for the vast quantity of water stored in Williston Lake. Do you want to know the real reason why Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government issued permits for Site C? They did it because it makes sense. Tom Fletcher is B.C. legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press. Email: tfletcher@blackpress.ca Twitter: @tomfletcherbc

Community Calendar

uPcoMiNG Kimberley Aquatic Centre FREE PUBLIC SWIM: Wednesday, October 5, 2016. Sponsored by Kimberley United Church Kimberley Nordic Club AGM Wednesday October 5 at 7:00 pm at the Nordic Lodge. All welcome, refreshments, memberships for sale... ph: 250-427-1721 for info. October 5th, 2016 (Wednesday) Oceans, Rivers and Mountains! Travel Inspirationalist and World Traveller Erin Buttler from G Adventures will take you on Grand Ocean Adventures, Cruising the world’s iconic Rivers, and hiking some the most eye-popping Mountain Trails on the planet. Mountain City Travel presents this fundraising Travel event “in support of AN IMAGE FOR HEALTH MRI Campaign. Light refreshment and groovy prizes. Doors open 6:30 – Presentation 7:00PM- 8:30 Buy tickets at: www.keycitytheatre.com October 12: Kimberley Garden Club first Fall 2016 meeting. Program is potpourri, what it is, how to make. Selkirk High School Library 7-9 pm. New members are always welcome. More info: contact Nola at 250-427-1948 or Marilee at 250-427-0517. A winter clothing re-use for the whole community, Sat. Oct. 15 at 395 Marsden. Donations of good clean coats, hats, mitts and outerwear gratefully accepted and passed on. 427-7316 for more info.

oNGoiNG Cranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon -1:00 Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication & leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911.toastmastersclubs.org. Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-426-8916, drop by our office at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www. cancervolunteer.ca and register as a volunteer. Mark Creek Lions meet 1st and 3rd Wednesdays at the Kimbrook. Supper 6:15-6:45, meeting 7:00-8:00pm. Contact Larry 250-4275612 or Bev 250-427-7722. New members welcome – men & ladies! The Cellar Thrift Store Open Mon. to Sat., noon to 4:30 p.m. Our revenues support local programs and outreach programs of Cranbrook United Church. Baker Lane Entry at 2 – 12th Ave. S. Cranbrook, B. C. Donations of new or gently used items welcome. The Chateau Kimberley Art Gallery is featuring the art of Karen Arrowsmith, Mary Ann Bidder, Joseph Cross, John de Jong, Lynne Grillmair, Ann Holtby Jones, Teresa Knight, Jeanie Miller, Jeanette Oostlander, Jean Pederson, Darlene Purnell and Marianne Rennick. The Gallery at 78 Howard St. is open 9-7 daily until October 15th, 2016. BINGO at the Kimberley Elks – Mondays, 6:30 start. All welcome. The Canadian Orthopaedic Foundation invites anyone expecting bone and joint surgery to make contact with local volunteers for peer support. 1-800-461-3639 ext 4, and ask for Lauralee. Al-Anon Family Group meets weekly. Monday at 7-8 pm at Marysville Community Church. (730 302 st.) The only requirement for membership is that there may be a problem of alcoholism in a relative or friend. For further information call Susan 250-427-0212 or email afglearning2live@gmail.com Thursdays from 5:00 to 6:00 pm; Focus Meat Draw at the Elks Club, Kimberley. Proceeds to Emergency Funds and non-profit organizations. TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) non profit weight loss support group meets EVERY Thursday at 5:00 pm, at Sr Citizen’s Centre, (downstairs) 125 17th Ave S, Cranbrook. Drop in, have fun while losing weight gradually. This Chapter has won an annual B.C. Provincial Award for “Best Avg Weight Loss Per Member”. Info: Marie 250 417 2642 Cantabelles, an all-female singing group, meets Mondays 7-9pm. Join us and learn how to sing with 2, 3 and 4part harmonies. Contact: Sue Trombley, 250-426-0808 or suetrombley53@gmail.com The Friends of the Kimberley Public Library used book store in Marysville is open Wed to Sat; 10:30 to 3:30 & Sunday 1:00 to 4:00. Noon every Wednesday, downtown United Church & Centre for Peace, the bells will call you to a time of calm. This is NOT church, rather it is a time to gather in a circle in a welcoming and harmonious space to practice the way of Taize. Wouldn’t you cherish a time to stop? to gather when the bells ring? to join with others in silence, in prayer, in meditative song? Masonic Lodges of B.C. and Yukon will supply transportation to cancer patients who have arrived at Kelowna or Vancouver. This free service will be at the destination point. Example: from airport to clinic and clinic to airport on return, also around the destination city. Info may be received from your doctor, Canadian Cancer Society, or by phoning Ron at 250-426-8159. Quilters meet in Kimberley on the 2nd Monday at Centennial Hall at 7:00 PM and the 4th Monday for sewing sessions in the United Church Hall at 10 Boundary Street. Enjoy Painting? Join ArtGroup 75, Fridays 1pm-4pm, Sept. June. Seniors Hall, Cranbrook. 125. 17th Ave. S. MILITARY AMES is a social/camaraderie/support group that meets the first and third Tuesdays of the month in the Kimberley Public Library reading room. All veterans are welcome. For more information call Cindy @ 250 919 3137. Funtastic Singers meet every Tuesday 6:45 pm at the Cranbrook United Church (by Safeway). No experience necessary. Contact Cranbrook Arts, 250-426-4223. The Cranbrook Quilter’s Guild meet on the 2nd and 4th Tuesday of every month, September - June, 7.15 p.m. at the Cranbrook Senior Citizens Hall, 125-17th Ave South. Call Jennifer at 250-426-6045. Place your notice in your “What’s up?” Community Calendar Free of charge. this column is intended for the use of clubs and non-profit organizations to publicize their coming events — provided the following requirements are met: • Notices will be accepted two weeks prior to the event. • All notices must be emailed, faxed or dropped off in person. No telephone calls please. • Notices should Not exceed 30 words. • Only one notice per week from any one club or non-profit organization. • All notices must be received by the Thursday prior to publication. • There is no guarantee of publication. Notices will run subject to space limitations.

toWnsman & Bulletin Community Calendar

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Page 8 Friday, October 7, 2016

SPORTS Ice take three goalie act on the road

Kootenay to wait until after road trip to decide on season’s goaltending duo BRAD MCLEOD

In the opening weeks of the season, the Kootenay Ice were forced to make several difficult roster decisions. Heading into Thanksgiving weekend their lineup is almost set, but they still have one more big cut to make — they need to get rid of a goalie. Unlike most of their WHL competition, the Ice are still holding three goaltenders. So far this season, Payton Lee, Declan Hobbs, and rookie Jakob Walter have all traded off spending time in net, on the bench, and in the press box. After Walter’s admirable debut performance against Moose Jaw on Tuesday, in which he made 32 saves on 35 shots and was named the game’s third star, management’s decision has been made even harder. “It’s [going to be] really tough [but] it’s a good problem to have,”

coach Luke Pierce said on the crowded situation in net. “Depth in that position is extremely important and we feel confident in all three guys and I don’t know that we’re in a huge rush to make that [decision]. “I think we’ll talk a little more this week and we’ll take all three guys on the trip with us and then see from there.” For their part, the goaltending trio doesn’t seem too concerned. “It’s [been] fun, we all get along,” Walter said following Tuesday’s game. “We all know we’re fighting for a spot here so we just keep playing hard and [wait to] see what happens.” Walter also said that despite the competition, he’s taken advantage of the opportunity to learn from his colleagues. “[Lee] is a good mentor, he tells me to keep going and just keep working hard, doing what you’re doing and

JOSH LOCKHART

BRAD MCLEOD PHOTO

Payton Lee (left) and Declan Hobbs (right) share a net in practice. [success] will come.” As one of the Ice’s three designated 20-year-old players who was brought in during the off-season to give the Ice stability, Lee is unlikely to be going anywhere. Hobbs also has an assumed advantage over Walter, due to having played for the Ice in 24 games last season and being a year older. The fact that Walter has stuck around as

long as he has, however, gives cause to believe that he could overtake Hobbs, if one of them either falters or exceeds expectations. So far this season Lee has gotten three starts and has a team-best 0.920 save percentage, while Hobbs and Walter both have one start apiece and have 0.914 and 0.870 save percentages, respectively. General manager Jeff Chynoweth previously told the Townsman that the team’s goal was to get to two goalies by around Thanksgiving. Although choosing their two goaltenders is important, the team is also in desperate need of their first win. Lee would be the safest bet on putting up a ‘W’ but with the real battle for a

roster spot looking to be between Hobbs and Walter, Kootenay might also look to ensure that they both get action in Saskatchewan. But will the team opt to go with three different starters during a very challenging weekend, on the road, against extremely talented competition? And if not, how will they ensure they’ve made an informed choice? These questions will certainly be answered over the next few days. The Ice are in Regina on Friday to take on the Pats, they then head to Moose Jaw for a Saturday night game against the Warriors, and finally close out the trip in Swift Current where they play the Broncos on Monday afternoon.

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PICK UP IS OCTOBER 15, 2015

VERY IMPORTANT NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING WHO: Zone 7, 55+ BC Games Society WHEN: November 2, 2016, 10:00 a.m. WHERE: Cranbrook Seniors Hall, 125 - 17th Ave S. Cranbrook Partial Agenda: Presidents Report Zone 7 Directors Report Treasurer Report Election of Directors THE SOCIETY IS IN DESPERATE NEED FOR A VOLUNTEER TO ACCEPT THE POSITION OF TREASURER. UNFORTUNATELY ZONE 7 CANNOT OPERATE WITHOUT A TREASURER. WE STRONGLY ENCOURAGE ALL MEMBERS, AND NON MEMBERS, TO ATTEND. Contact info: John Boucher, President Zone 7, BC Games Society, 250-427-1844

The Kimberley Dynamiters start off their 4-game road trip with two games this weekend. First, the Nitros head over the Kootenay Pass to Castlegar, to play the Rebels (34-0-0) on Friday. Then on Saturday, they return to the East Kootenays and play the Columbia Valley Rockies (1-5-0-1) in Invermere. “Road trips are always fun — you get to bond with the guys,” said Dynamiters Captain Ryan Hozjan. “I think [that] this road trip is a good chance for us to prove that we are a good road team, having only played one game on the road so far.” The Dynamiters only road game so far this season was in Golden, and they won that match. The Rebels currently sit fourth in their division and are 1-1 at home. They have four players — Logan Styler, John Moeller, Ed Lindsey & Andrew Petten — averaging at least one point a game. “Castlegar played us tough when they came here a few weeks back,” said Kimberley general manager and head coach Derek Stuart. “They have improved their team since then [and] are right in the mix of things in their division. “It will definitely be a hard game for our players [and] a good test for us.” The Rockies, however, are heading in a different direction in the standings. They are in last place in their division, currently on a five game losing streak, and are 1-3 at home. But Stuart doesn’t want to focus on the standings. “You’re never as good as your record says and you’re never as bad as your record says. “We are the defending Kootenay Confer-

ence champions,” he said. “We have a target on our back [and] now [that we are] 6-1, I’m sure that target is a little bigger ... we are most likely going to see other teams’ best games, and we need to be prepared to play our best.”

“I think [that] this road trip is a good chance for us to prove that we are a good road team, having only played one game on the road so far.” Ryan Hozjan The Dynamiters want to keep the winning streak going, but don’t want to focus on it. “It’s something we need to keep out of our minds,” Hozjan said. “Having a win streak is nice, but it’s definitely not going to be our focus this weekend.” “Hopefully we are not thinking too much about what we have done,” Stuart agreed. “[We need to] focus more on what we have learned and on what we are going to do. “We have a lot of confidence in our group [and] the players have a lot of confidence in themselves … if we play our game the result should take care of itself.” Puck drop for the Castlegar game is 8 p.m, and then 7:30 p.m. in Invermere. For up-to-date Kimberley Dynamiter information visit: www. kimberleydynamiters. net/blog. Also follow Josh on twitter @joshuaklockhart.


Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Friday, October 7, 2016 Page 9

WE ARE READY TO

Tension builds in a fraught mother-daughter relationship in “Lucy.”

Barry Coulter photo

Daughter from the Future

In CCT’s ‘Lucy,’ an autistic girl takes us on a dark journey to the interior Barry Coulter

T

he knife-edge life of an autistic 13-year-old girl is especially sharp when her parents are estranged. Lucy, the girl in the play of the same name, takes us on an eerie journey to the interior of two minds, both of them seeking silence. “Lucy” is launching Cranbrook Community Theatre’s 2016-2017 season, and it opens tonight, Friday, Oct. 7, at the Studio Stage Door in Cranbrook. Canadian playwright Damien Atkins’s piece revolves around an autistic girl going through tumultuous change, but it is a story about a mother-daughter relationship, fraught with tension, in which the two begin to see themselves in each other. Director Trevor Lundy has created a visual hallucination of a set, in which real life walls melt away to reveal Lucy’s dreaming mind. At the play’s outset, Lucy has reached the volatile edge of adolescence, and her father Gavin, going through changes in his own life, is for the first time giving his daughter into the custody of her mother Vivian, a renowned and brilliant paleoanthropologist, so that Lucy can have access to schools, therapy, counselling, and a female mentor. Lucy has been allowed to withdraw into her disability, and the effort should now be to draw her back out into the real world. But Vivian is spectacularly unsuited to moth-

erhood. She’s not even particularly suited to friendship. Million-yearold hominids, walls of caves painted eons ago, fossilized bones, and what all these represent — that is Vivian’s spiritual home, her own inner world. The silent but volatile, spinning world of Lucy, her blood, excrement, and sensory integration dysfunction, bring the fastidious Vivian to the point of breaking. But at one point, Lucy and Vivian meet in an hallucination, sharing the same nightmare, and the bond begins to develop. Like daughter, like mother. Vivian is using her brilliance to prove that civilization is a mistake, and suddenly Lucy seems proof of that. To Vivian, Lucy’s autism is a rejection of the world, and a sign of a more evolved state. This validates Vivian’s view, and justifies her own retreat into her own interior world, of vanished fossil people and empty Ethio-

Grand Slam of Curling November 8th-13th Black Press will be publishing a special edition on November 3rd, welcoming all teams to Cranbrook. Call us today to find out how your business can participate and show your support. Space is limited. Deadline is October 20th. 250-426-5201 250-427-5333

Barry Coulter photo

Kelsey Thompson as Lucy pian plains. Vivian’s brilliance, and the desire to retreat into her own inner silence, is heading towards a crash confrontation with the power of the world of normalcy. Along the way, there is a poetic definition of autism, a crash course in evolutionary science, and yes, the mercury thing comes up too. Michael Prestwich plays Gavin, Lucy’s father. He is well-meaning and gentle, but Lucy is growing beyond him. Dean Nicholson is Morris, Lucy’s therapist, who helps interpret Lucy’s world for us. Ashlée Perreault is Julia, Vivian’s colleague, assistant and admirer, who has an instinctive

deft touch with Lucy and who observes with alarm the changes Vivian is going through. The play is driven by powerful performances by Kelsey Thompson as Lucy and Tracy McGuire as Vivian. We actually see and hear the play from the viewpoint of Lucy, who narrates to us in her own proto-language, and from this colourful and alien perspective leads us into Vivian’s troubled heart — and genetic code. CCT’s production of “Lucy,” written by Damien Atkins and directed by Trevor Lundy, opens Friday, Oct. 7, at the Studio Stage Door in Cranbrook, and runs October 8, the Oct. 12-15 and Oct. 19-22.

250-489-3455


Cranbrook townsman

Page 10 Friday, October 7, 2016

We Match Prices So You Can Just Shop

when you spend $250† in-store.

25,000

That’s $25 in rewards.

†When you spend $250 or more in store before applicable taxes and after all other coupons, discounts or PC® Points redemptions are deducted, in a single transaction at any participating store location [excludes purchases of tobacco, alcohol products, prescriptions, gift cards, phone cards, lottery tickets, all third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners, etc.) and any other products which are provincially regulated], you will earn the points indicated. Product availability may vary by store. We are not obligated to award points based on errors or misprints.

*

Thursday, October 6th to Thursday, October 13th, 2016.

baked in-store

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Guaranteed Lowest Prices Every week, we actively check our major competitors’ flyers and match the price on hundreds of items. Look for the Ad Match message in store for the items we’ve actively matched. Plus, we’ll match any major competitor’s flyer item if you show us! *we match prices & Guaranteed Lowest Prices Applies only to our major supermarket competitors’ flyer items. Major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us based on a number of factors which can vary by store location. We will match the competitor’s advertised price only during the effective date of the competitor’s flyer advertisement. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES (note that our major supermarket competitors may not). Due to the fact that product is ordered prior to the time of our Ad Match checks, quantities may be limited. We match identical items (defined as same brand, size, and attributes) and in the case of fresh produce, meat, seafood and bakery, we match a comparable item (as determined solely by us). We will not match competitors’ “multi-buys” (eg. 2 for $4), “spend x get x”, “Free”, “clearance”, discounts obtained through loyalty programs, or offers related to our third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners etc.). We reserve the right to cancel or change the terms of this program at any time.

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EVERY SATURDAY + SUNDAY 10AM - 6PM unless we are unable due to unforeseen technical difficulties.

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Quantities and/or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in all stores. No rainchecks. No substitutions on clearance items or where quantities are advertised as limited. Advertised pricing and product selection (flavour, colour, patterns, style) may vary by store location. We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements. We are not obligated to sell items based on errors or misprints in typography or photography. Coupons must be presented and redeemed at time of purchase. Applicable taxes, deposits, or environmental surcharges are extra. No sales to retail outlets. Some items may have “plus deposit and environmental charge” where applicable. ®/™ The trademarks, service marks and logos displayed in this flyer are trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. All rights reserved. © 2016 Loblaws Inc. * we match prices! Applies only to our major supermarket competitors’ flyer items. Major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us based on a number of factors which can vary by store location. We will match the competitor’s advertised price only during the effective date of the competitor’s flyer advertisement. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES (note that our major supermarket competitors may not). Due to the fact that product is ordered prior to the time of our Ad Match checks, quantities may be limited. We match identical items (defined as same brand, size, and attributes) and in the case of fresh produce, meat, seafood and bakery, we match a comparable item (as determined solely by us). We will not match competitors’ “multi-buys” (eg. 2 for $4), “spend x get x”, “Free”, “clearance”, discounts obtained through loyalty programs, or offers related to our third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners etc.). We reserve the right to cancel or change the terms of this program at any time. Customer Relations: 1-866-999-9890.

Run Date:

Thurs, Oct 6, 2016

Kamloops / Kelowna / Comox / Langley / Surrey /Abbotsford / Mission / Campbell River / Duncan /

Typesetter: QL


Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Friday, October 7, 2016 Page 11

REALTY EXECUTIVES CRANBROOK 911 Baker Street, Cranbrook, BC • 250-426-3355 • Toll Free 1-888-629-4002 www.realtyexecutives cranbrook.com

There is just one name when it comes to buying or selling Real Estate in the Kootenays.

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This beauty offers 4800+ sq. ft. of living space; invite the whole family for a BBQ! 5 bdrm 5 bath home features a large bright kitchen, gas fireplace, 10” ceilings, central vac, & so much more. 2411803.

This character home boasts a lot of original wood on the main floor. Single car garage, shed and fenced yard. This home has a comfortable, private, self-contained in-law suite. 2415482

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Bright, spacious, well maintained, one bdrm apartment! Over-looks green space, same floor laundry & an elevator for easy access. Why rent when your mortgage payment will be cheaper? 2415232.

Excellent location! This home has a comfortable, private, self-contained suite. 2415484.

Call Crystal or Sharron

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Looking for an acreage with garage, fenced riding arena, backing onto crown land? This acreage has it all! This home has a beautifully updated kitchen, tile floors, hardwood & more too numerous to mention! 2414295.

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Beautiful property situated on the majestic Moyie River. Amazing, peaceful and private. Impeccable 2 bdrm, 2 bath manufactured home. Comes with cutest guest cabin, double car garage & more. 2416538

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This large building with approx. 7,000 sq. ft. per floor. Each floor has an open area, section for offices and men’s & ladies’ bathrooms. The lower level has a commercial kitchen, the other levels have small kitchen/coffee areas. Lots of windows. 2415262.

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Here is heaven in Wasa. Two cabins on just under 3 acres. The little cabin is a great guest cottage and the larger home is a fixer upper. Both can be lived in year round with some TLC. The view and the wild life is just out your door. All this and lake front too! 2411904.

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Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Page 12 Friday, October 7, 2016

Relic & Reliquary: a unique exhibition at Centre 64 Mike Redfern

Unique, intriguing, spiritual; just some of the adjectives that can be applied to the exhibition, Relics & Reliquaries, currently on display in the Gallery at Centre 64. Kimberley sculptor Rob Toller and Nelson painter Michael Graham have combined forces to create an installation in the gallery that turns the space into something distinctly other-worldly. Toller’s metal and mixed media sculptures, in the past almost entirely abstract, occasionally suggesting but never literally depicting

natural or figurative forms, have taken a new departure for this exhibition. From exploring wood, metal, stone and other materials to see what they can do, how they can combine to create interesting and dynamic shapes, Toller has used these raw materials to create religiously and culturally symbolic sculptures, from shrines and monuments to guardians of the underworld and bells that reverberate a somber toll throughout the gallery. Some rise upwards from the floor, others hang down from above.

Some are small and intimate, others are large and bold. Relics of the past - rusty machinery, the bark of fallen trees, stones worn smooth by ancient seas — these cast-off materials take on new life in Toller’s intriguing sculptures. Around the free-standing sculptural forms spread Graham’s painted panels. Created of layers of images, some painted, some collaged, some photographic, they, too, draw upon relics left behind, layers of history, repainted and re-presented. Graham‘s hand is seen, too, in some of the

Courtesy Mike Redfern

Collaborating artists Rob Toller (left) and Michael Graham enjoy a humourous moment at the reception for their Relic & Reliquary exhibition at Centre 64 sculptural pieces where he and Toller collaborated in creating the

final design. The gallery walls almost vibrate with the

patterns and colours of these large abstract designs. The viewer can

read into them all sorts of possible shapes and forms. Some seem almost three dimensional. And by some strange alchemy, known only to these two artistic wizards, the paintings and sculptures complement each other in creating a setting that makes the most of the gallery’s own striking architecture, a setting that feels almost medieval despite its contemporariness. Relics & Reliquaries continues in the Gallery at Centre 64 until Saturday, October 22. It can be viewed between 1 and 5 p.m., Tuesdays through Saturdays, and admission is free.

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Environmental Monitoring Committee Annual Public Meeting Permit 107517

Sparwood Seniors Drop In Centre 101 Pine Avenue October 19, 2016 Open House 5:00 – 6:00 p.m. Presentation with Q & A session 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. The Environmental Monitoring Committee (EMC) was created as a requirement of the Environmental Management Act Permit 107517 for Teck’s steelmaking coal operations in the Elk Valley. It is an independent body with representation from the Government of B.C., Ktunaxa Nation Council, Teck, and an independent scientist expert, which provides technical and traditional knowledge input and advice on environmental monitoring for Permit 107517 and the Elk Valley Water Quality Plan.

Learn More About Environmental Monitoring The public is invited to the second annual Environmental Monitoring Committee public meeting on October 19 in Sparwood to learn more about the water quality monitoring and management work being undertaken relating to Teck’s Environmental Management Act Permit. The annual meeting is an opportunity to ask questions of EMC members about water quality in the region, and the work the Committee has conducted over the past year. A general open house will run from 5:00 – 6:00 p.m., followed by a presentation starting at 6:00 p.m. Refreshments will be provided. For more information please visit www.teckelkvalley.com or email: emcpermit107517@gmail.com


Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

PUZZLE Because Every Day is Special

We will be closed for Thanksgiving Sat. Oct 8 – Mon. Oct. 10

Jackets & Vests

by Nygard

STOP IN and get your holiday wine started NOW!

OPEN AGAIN Tues. Oct. 11

STYLES, ASSORTED SIZES COLOURS &

OPEN LATE EVERY THURSDAY UNTIL 7PM.

Happy Thanksgiving

Friday, October 7, 2016 Page 13

Wednesday’s answer

K O O T E N AY

778-481-5215

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250.426.6671

1685A Warren Ave., Kimberley, BC OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11am – 7:30 pm Licensed.

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1009 Baker St. 250.489.8464

Cranbrook, BC Behind Integra Tire on Van Horne

CONTRACTING SERVICES

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PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

10/07

Fill in the grid so that every row (nine cells wide), every column (nine cells tall) and every box (three cells by three cells) contain the digits 1 through 9 in any order. There is only one solution for each puzzle. Yesterday’s Cryptoquote:

THE TROUBLE WITH THE RAT RACE IS THAT EVEN IF YOU WIN, YOU’RE STILL A RAT. - LILY TOMLIN

CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELL CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202


Page 14 Friday, October 7, 2016

COMICS Horoscopes

Kootenay Concert Connection presents

by Jacqueline Bigar

LIVE.IN.CONCERT. *2016 Canadian Country Music Album of the Year Award (Tin Roof)* *24 time CCMA winner*

Cranbrook’s Key City Theatre November 16th at 7:30PM Tickets are available now at the Key City Theatre box office, or by calling 250-426-7006, or online at www.keycitytheatre.com. All seats are reserved and priced at $45 all inclusive.

Gord Bamford LIVE in Concert on November 16th is a presentation of the Kootenay Concert Connection in association with B 104.7, and the Key City Theatre.

Eleventh Annual

Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

“The Magic of Autumn”

Door Prizes!

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You might feel pressured by a person who you feels assumes too much. You can’t sit on your distain any more than the other party can sit on his or hers. If there is a run-in, it could be bad. Try to be more open-minded. Only then will options appear. Tonight: Till the wee hours. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Use your ability to empathize and understand how others feel. You might be at the point of frustration that could cause you to lose your temper. Try to be more distant. Remember, what works for one person might not work for another. Tonight: Rethink plans if need be. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) One-on-one relating could be more volatile than you had anticipated. In fact, a fight could ensue, and you could be shocked by what you hear. Give up being as fussy and touchy as you have been. Your ingenuity works its way through any problem. Tonight: Forget problems.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Others play a more dominant role than in the recent past. You could be surprised by what comes up for you. Allow your sense of humor to define a difficult situation. Recognize that an associate is changing in front of your eyes. Tonight: Go along with someone else’s plans. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Focus on your work and what is needed to complete a certain project. Try to be present in a discussion, even though your thoughts are elsewhere. A situation might be transforming right in front of you. Conversations could add to the present confusion. Tonight: Do only what you want. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You might want to keep things light and humorous, but many people won’t share that same mood. Accept this fact rather than annoy others by trying to make them smile and laugh. Your emotional nature will benefit from a sudden change of plans. Tonight: Paint the town red. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

Tundra

You naturally feel tense, no matter what is happening around you. Some unexpected actions might hold a surprise or two for you. You have changed your perspective about a personal matter, which is affecting how you feel. Tonight: Don’t let a difficult situation color your night. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You will want to express your feelings in a new way. The problem could be that you aren’t getting confirmation that others are really hearing your message. Confusion seems to surround you. Try to sort out the different messages. Tonight: Meet up with a pal and/or a loved one. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Be aware of the limits that you have imposed upon yourself. A child or loved one might react in a surprising way, which is likely to set you back. Use caution with all financial matters at this point. You could run into a problem without even realizing it. Tonight: Make it your treat. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You feel more energetic and upbeat than you have in a considerable amount of time. Take

your time accepting a new responsibility. You might be carrying too much on your shoulders. Ask yourself what you really need to do here. Tonight: Out on the town. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You could feel out of sorts and might not know why. On a subconscious level, you are processing a change that is affecting your life in various ways. A discussion with a partner might only aggravate you more. Tonight: Make sure you have time to relax. Schedule a massage. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Take the opportunity to stand up for what you want. This type of experience could occur at home and/or at work. Maintain a sense of humor, and you will bypass a problem. A partner or loved one comes through for you in a big way. Tonight: Where the crowds are. BORN TODAY Musician John Mellencamp (1951), singer/songwriter Toni Braxton (1967), entrepreneur Simon Cowell (1959)

By Chad Carpenter

Artisan Market

Friday, October 21 • 3pm - 8pm Saturday, October 22 • 10am - 4pm at Bootleg Gap Golf Clubhouse, Kimberley An amazing collection of

Handcrafted Creations

Entrance fee $2.00 – donated to the Kimberley Food Bank.

Soup & Sandwich Buffet ~ Saturday 11am - 2pm This event is wheelchair accessible.

OVER THE LAST 10 YEARS WE HAVE DONATED $13,700.00 TO THE KIMBERLEY FOOD BANK!

Cranbrook

Garfield

By Jim Davis

Kimberley

Cranbrook Alliance Church

1200 Kootenay Street N. 250-489-4704 Pastor Grant McDowell Sunday Service & Children’s Ministry 10:00 am www.cranbrookalliancechurch.com

First Baptist Church Pastor Kevin Ewaskow Children’s Ministries Worship Service 10:30 am 334 - 14th Ave. 250-426-4319 www.fbcranbrook.org

Marysville

Community Church SUNDAY SERVICE 10:30 am

730 - 302 Street, Marysville 250-427-3161 • 250-427-7099

Cranbrook United Church #2 12 Avenue S.

Hagar the Horrible

By Dick Browne

(Corner of Baker St. and 12th Ave S.) Ph: 250-426-2022 / Fax: 250-426-2085

Sunday Worship...10:00 am

Sunday School 1st & 3rd Sunday www.cranbrookunited.com

St. Aidan Orthodox Church

201-7 Ave. S., Cranbrook 250-489-8006 Divine Liturgy Service 10:30 am Fellowship Lunch & Sunday School to follow.

Fr. Andrew Applegate, 250-420-1582

All are welcome to come in, see, listen, pray, and stay for lunch.

www.saintaidan.ca

Baby Blues

By Kirkman and Scott

Sat. evening Vespers Service 6:30 pm

Kimberley United Church

10 Boundary St. - 250-427-2428

Rev. Sunny Kim Sunday Worship at 10:00am www.kimberleyunited.ca

Rhymes with Orange

CALL 426-3272 OR VISIT

www.tribute.ca

for this week’s movie listings

By Hillary B. Price

Dear Annie by Annie Lane

take, take, take Dear Annie: I hope you can help with a problem that really has gotten out of hand in my family. I married into a large family over 30 years ago. I love them all like my own. The problem is that anytime there is a family gathering -- be it a birthday party, a cookout or just watching a ballgame -- several members of the family consistently insist on doing one or all of the following: --Bringing their uninvited guests to someone else’s home. Sometimes their guests show up before them. (“Who are you?” “Oh, your cousin invited me.”) --Eating as if they were starving. I mean going into the kitchen and helping themselves to food in the refrigerator. --My personal favorite: fixing “to-go plates” right away, without regard to how many guests haven’t eaten and certainly without asking. Would you believe that? Fixing a plate “to go” before you’ve even eaten! I have told the guilty relatives how I feel about this, and it has fallen on deaf ears for years. I was taught that you always bring a contribution to a gathering unless the host lets you know that it isn’t necessary. My personal policy has been to bring a dish large enough to feed the people who come with me. It exasperates me to no end when someone shows up at my house with four children and an additional guest -- who herself brings two kids -- and all they bring among the eight of them is one package of hot dogs. They all stuff themselves and leave with a plate for everyone. Mind you, I don’t leave containers out for the taking. The people to whom I am referring just make themselves at home and assume it’s OK. I have decided to go to the movies the next holiday and wait for an answer from you, as I am about to lose my temper with these folks. I have a nice home and plenty of space to entertain, and I love to have folks over, but this is out of hand. Help me, please. Other family members feel the same as I do and don’t know how to deal with it, either. -- Fed Up Dear Fed: It would be bad enough if children were behaving this way; that these are full-grown adults is flat-out ridiculous. It’s time for an intervention. Tap the support of the family members who feel the same way you do. Tell these rude relatives they can start behaving like civilized adults or they can stop coming to your house. When you married your husband, you signed up for being part of his large family -but you didn’t sign up for the role of a head chef at a pro bono buffet restaurant. Dear Annie: A few years ago, friends of ours helped us secure a rental place in the same community where they winter. We have invited other friends to stay for short periods of time with us. The woman in the couple who helped us bawled me out recently for not including them in every activity with our visiting friends. She says I am insensitive. Should we find another place? Now we feel as if she will be stalking our every move. Also, she does not like some of these activities. So are we not supposed to do these at all? -- Snowbirds Dear Snowbirds: Is she your friend or your limb? There’s nothing wrong with wanting to do things on your own with guests. This friend seems to be holding it over your head that she helped you to secure the rental, as if that were some grand heroic gesture and you’re now forever in her debt. You’re not. Continue to do what you’d like, and don’t let her ruin your fun. No one can send you on a guilt trip if you aren’t a willing passenger. Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com. To find out more about Annie Lane and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2016 CREATORS.COM


DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Page15 15 Friday, October 2016 PAGE Friday, 7, October 7, 2016

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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

Curly Unruh

TRAVEL EMPLOYMENT

April 26, 1938 – September 23, 2016

BUSINESS SERVICES PETS & LIVESTOCK

It is with great sadness that the family of Curly Unruh announces his passing on Friday, September 23, 2016 at East Kootenay Regional Hospital.

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE RENTALS AUTOMOTIVE ADULT ENTERTAINMENT LEGAL NOTICES

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ON THE WEB:

To a great couple

Brian and Erla

Congratulations on your

October 7, 1966 - October 7, 2016

Love from all your friends

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IN THE

CLASSIFIEDS

Obituaries

Obituaries

JOHN MATHEW PANATTONI John Mathew Panattoni passed away on Wednesday, September 28, 2016. He is survived by his parents, Scott and Gina and siblings, Natalie, Robert and Emily. He was predeceased by his paternal grandparents, Jim and Wendy Panattoni. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to the East Kootenay SPCA, Box 2, Cranbrook, BC V1C 4H6. A Celebration of Life for John will be held at the Kimberley Conference Centre, 290 North Star Blvd., Kimberley on Sunday, October 9, 2016 at 11:00 am. Condolences may be left for the family at www.markmemorial.com. Mark Memorial Funeral Services in care of arrangements (250) 426-4864

Joseph G. Kershaw 1932 - 2016

It is with sadness that we announce the passing of our dear brother Joseph on Thursday, September 29, 2016 at the Kimberley Special Care Home. Joe was born on September 17, 1932 in Rossland, BC and grew up in Kimberley. He was an avid outdoorsman and enjoyed camping and fishing. After completing a steel fabricator apprenticeship in Kimberley with Cominco Joe decided to move to other communities and endeavours. He completed courses in small yacht design, tinsmithing and auto mechanics. Joe was a prolific artist learning the craft from his father, but developed his own style. He was featured in a published book of prominent artists along with other well know BC artists. Landscape painting was his passion in life. He also enjoyed playing the trombone with several local bands. Joe is survived by his sisters Marie Swab (Marshall) of Calgary, AB, Elaine Kershaw of Airdrie, AB, brother Alan Kershaw (Helen) of Quesnel, BC and many nieces and nephews. He was predeceased by his sister Dorothy Bowen (Ken) of Kimberley, BC, Yvonne Kitt (Ed) of Kimberley, BC, brother John Kershaw (Bertha) of Vancouver, BC, and his parents Gilbert Henry Kershaw and Mary Dorothy Kershaw of Kimberley, BC. A celebration of Joe’s life will be held at McPherson Funeral Home in Kimberley on Sunday, October 9, 2016 from 1:00 – 3:00 pm. Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com

Curly is survived and will be greatly missed by his wife of 56 years Lynne, son Rick (Mary) Unruh, two daughters Leslie (Brian), Jaci (Mike) Bryant, eight grandchildren, three great-grandchildren, and by his brother Ken (Karen) Unruh. Curly was predeceased by his parents Peter and Annie Unruh, his sisters Elizabeth Lowen, and Ann Epp, and by his brothers Peter, Harry and Abram Unruh. There was a family celebration held at his home on Friday, September 30, 2016. Those wishing to make a memorial donation in Curly’s honour may do so to the East Kootenay S.P.C.A., Box 2, Cranbrook, BC, V1C 4H6. Love You Dad ! Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com

Kenneth Pocha “Ken” 1943 – 2016

1943 was the year that the world was graced with a wonderful man named Kenneth Pocha. He was born in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan into a family of 16. In his younger years he enjoyed being at home working on the family farm. He moved to BC in the 50’s and pursued a career in the logging industry until a heart attack left him to follow his true passion, working on vehicles. This is the Ken Pocha everyone grew to know and love. Everyone knew, if you broke down, or needed a place to fix a vehicle Ken was there to help you. Ken’s biggest joy was children, and many of the neighbourhood kids called him “Uncle Ken. He never had children of his own but he raised a family full of children whom he took under his wing and his guidance and he loved them as his own. Ken was the type of man that would give you the shirt off his back or a shoulder to cry on. He was always ready with a joke, (as dirty as they were), to tease the hell out of you, or to sit and have a coffee where he would share his knowledge of cars and the value of family. He was a loving brother, uncle, father and grandfather. Ken is survived by his best friend Ada Sands, children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, brothers, sisters, nieces, nephews and great nieces and nephews. He was predeceased by his parents Alfred Willard and Wilno Catherine, his sister Kay, brother Archie, brother Joe, sister Dolly, brother Alfred, brother Lionel, sister Dorthy and nephew Joe. Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com

Community Newspapers We’re at the heart of things™

Peter James Andrew Aakre Luberg

August 23, 1928 – September 29, 2016 Peter left us to join the Lord and his beloved wife Melva. He lived his life and fought his illness on his own terms. He will be very much missed by his three nieces; Teri, Vicky, Sandra, and their families. Peter was predeceased by his parents and his only sibling Elvira. Peter’s family wish to thank all of the home care and nursing support as well as the doctors and nurses who cared for him while in the East Kootenay Regional Hospital. Most importantly Peter’s nieces would like to say “Thank you” to his Angel on earth Susan Wilde, who cared for him unfailingly. A warm thank you to Peter’s church family for their visits, errands, kindness and love. A memorial service will be held at 1:00 pm Wednesday, October 12, 2016 at Kimberley Pentecostal Church in Meadowbrook. Peter’s family ask that in lieu of flowers, donations be made to the Kimberley Pentecostal Church, 8687 - Highway 95A, Kimberley, BC, V1A 3M3. Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com

TRY A CLASSIFIED Kathleen Gladys Canning (nee Hockley) Kathleen Gladys Canning was born May 30, 1921 and passed away in Cranbrook on the evening of Wednesday, September 28, 2016. Kaye is survived by her devoted and loving husband of 69+ years, Lister; her son Fred (Carol) and her daughters Helen (Guy) and Kathy. Also left are her grandchildren; Cody (Claire) and their sons Levi and Dawson - Sara (Shaune) their children Connor, Harmonie and Savannah - Tim (Stacy) Robbins and daughter Molly - Kelly Robbins - Jaycee Hunt (Lane ). She is also survived by her brother Cal (Gloria) Hockley and sisters-in-law Lolly Hockley, Doreen Hockley and Kae Hockley as well as many many nieces nephews and further down the line! Mom leaves behind a legacy of friends who will miss her jokes and laughter. Mom enjoyed life to the fullest and right up until the end had something smart to say. Mom loved her sports and was watching baseball at the end! She loved her family and we were all blessed to have a very active mom, nana and great nana who attended as many sporting events , dance recitals and gymnastics as possible. She was our biggest fan and always said “have fun”! This is not goodbye Mom it’s til we meet again. The family would like to extend our heartfelt thanks to the staff in emergency and on 2nd floor for the love they shared with our mom. The day to remember the life of Kaye Canning will be held on Saturday, October 15, 2016 at the Wasa Hall at 1:00 pm. If friends desire, memorial donations may be made in her memory to the Wasa Memorial Garden. Condolences may be left for the family at www.mark memorial.com Mark Memorial Funeral Services in care of arrangement (250) 426-4864


DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Page 16 Friday, OctoberOctober 7, 2016 7, 2016 PAGE 16 Friday,

Announcements

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Obituaries

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Information

Lost & Found

HARTLEY LORAAS

Sympathy & Understanding

1942 – 2016

We sadly share our mourning of the loss of Hartley Loraas who left us on July 8, 2016 in Trail B.C. Hartley will lovingly be remembered by his sister Rona Loraas in Vernon, his niece Kristy Jackson in Trail, his nephew Colin Jackson in Clearwater, his nephew Kary Loraas in Kimberley, and numerous relatives. He was predeceased by his brother Rod Loraas, and his parents Chris and Roy Loraas. Hartley enrolled in a Business program at SAIT after graduation, but returned to Kimberley after his first yearto partner with his Dad in the family business Rocky Mountain Sports Ltd. He decided to sell his interest in the business, and spent over three years travelling and working in Europe. When he returned, he attended Simon Fraser University to obtain his teaching degree, and there found his true life calling. Hartley joined the Business Education staff of Templeton Secondary High school in Vancouver in 1977 and was beloved by his students and admired by his friends and colleagues. He was a member (usually the chair person) of almost every school committee (including King of Year End car rally), was promoted to Business Dept. Head, elected President of the BC Business Education, and served on the Curriculum Implementation team delivering workshops to teachers around the province. He was rewarded for his contributions by receiving the BCBEA Regional Award in recognition of his outstanding teaching and dedicated service to the business education community. Despite all the above Professional accolades, he was most proud of the school store he implemented at Templeton School, selling school rings, clothing, snacks, etc., where students could actually experience what he was teaching, (stocking shelves, pricing, reordering, profit margins, financial statements etc.) When he retired from Templeton in 1999 to move to Clearwater, his dedication to teaching continued, - he taught business computer courses for the TRU at the local community skills centre, and helped instruct high school curling classes. Hartley was a loving and giving man, with a great sense of humor, and an enormous heart for others, but he was also a very principled person who would not tolerate racial discrimination, foul language, and much to his niece and nephews chagrin, tattoos. One condolence message we received compared his mannerisms to Carey Grant – a class act – a true gentleman.

Hartley also loved fishing, and even though his categorized tackle boxes were annoying, he consistently won any “first, biggest, most� family competitions – maybe there was some merit to his philosophy “If you want big fish, use big lures�. He enjoyed all sports – mostly curling, and his mastery of a PVR and scheduled viewing was something to be commended – it allowed him to capture every sport event, wherever, at any time, from the comfort of his armchair. We have many cherished memories of Hartley as he left such an impression on our lives, and so many others.

You will be forever and so ‌ sadly missed. At Hartley’s request there will be no funeral or memorial service.

In Loving Memory

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He enjoyed cooking, sharing, and consuming good food, wine, cheesecake, and after dinner Spanish coffees, second only to his love for Andrew Lloyd Webber operas. He thought nothing of travelling to several different cities to view the same production with a different cast. Hartley was an avid reader with a particular interest in history, both family and World War 2 . He left us with exceptional family tree records, and a collection of 400 books on the history of World War 2.

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MAKE AN ANNOUNCEMENT Obituaries

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Housesitting HOUSE SITTER AVAILABLE Retired professional seeking house sitting for fall and winter months. Kimberley/Cranbrook area. No pets. Quiet nonsmoker, very clean. Reliable and bondable with excellent references. Please reply to: Box ‘A’, c/o Cranbrook Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, BC V1C 3R9.

Obituaries

Jiri “George� Vaclav Horak 1929 – 2016

George passed away peacefully on October 3rd at the Joseph Creek Care Home. He will be deeply missed by his brother Josef (Jane, sons George and John), sister Margaret (son George, daughter Jane and 8 grandchildren), brother Anthony (Mary, son John, daughters Mary, Anne and Margaret and 5 grandchildren), brother Peter (Mary, son Peter, daughters Mary and Ludmila and 11 grandchildren) and sister Anna (Emil, sons James and Paul). He will also be missed by his many friends who sought his counsel and enjoyed his company. He was predeceased by his father Josef, his mother Antonia, his brother-in-law John and his beloved wife Vera. George was born in Brno, Moravia on April 24th, 1929. At the age of fourteen he completed grade eight and began an apprenticeship as a bookbinder. After World War II, he escaped from communist controlled Czechoslovakia to Venezuela. In Caracas he found work as a bookbinder and later established a laundry business. In 1953 he was accepted into the seminary in Rome where he completed five years of studies for ordination as a priest. He served as pastor in northern Italy for several years before deciding to join the Jesuit order. After further studies at the novitiate in Austria, he was assigned to the Jesuit Czech Mission House in Montreal in 1962. There he taught at Loyola High School and was a counsellor at St. Mary’s High School. In 1968, George moved to Toronto where he was chaplain in a psychiatric hospital. While taking university classes toward a PhD in clinical psychology, he developed a relationship with Vera Moore, a social worker. After intense prayer and deliberation, he decided to leave the Jesuits and marry Vera. George was hired by the Ontario Parole and Probation Department. During his career, he served as a supervisor and staff training officer. George and Vera retired to Durham, Ontario where they lived for eleven years. For health reasons, George and Vera moved to Cranbrook, BC in 1994. They were married for 42 years until Vera’s death in 2012. In 2014 George wrote his memoir Witness: Voices and Choices which was published by St. Peter’s Press and Friesen Press. George was a spiritual man who followed his beliefs with courage. He was generous and grateful, a seeker of knowledge and truth in religion, languages, prayer, meditation and yoga. His funeral service will be held at Christ The Servant Catholic Church in Cranbrook on Tuesday, October 11th, 2016 at 10:00 am. Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com


DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Page17 17 Friday, October 2016 PAGE Friday,7, October 7, 2016

Employment

Employment

Services

Services

Services

Services

Services

Business Opportunities

Help Wanted

Financial Services

Education/Tutoring

Education/Tutoring

Education/Tutoring

Education/Tutoring

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1 temporary/full time, in-home care provider required for the care of 3 children in Cranbrook, BC. Wage = $11.00/hr. College certification and two years experience required. Send resume:

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CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELL

SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 6 (ROCKY MOUNTAIN)

SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 6 (ROCKY MOUNTAIN) School District No.6 (Rocky Mountain), McKim Middle School, is now accepting applications for a permanent, part-time (5 hrs/wk) Noon Hour Supervisor position, effective immediately. This is student supervisory work performed under the direction of a School Administrator or designate during lunch time. Completion of Grade 12 or equivalent, experience in working with youth is desirable. Rate of pay: As per Collective Agreement 440, $18.60/ hour. If you are interested in this position, please submit a resume and two professional references by 4pm on Thursday, October 13, 2016:

Meghan O’Neill Human Resources Coordinator School District No.6 (Rocky Mountain) P.O. Box 430 Invermere, BC V0A 1K0 PHONE: t E-MAIL: hr@sd6.bc.ca

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DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Page 18 Friday, OctoberOctober 7, 2016 7, 2016 PAGE 18 Friday,

Services

Merchandise for Sale

Personal Care

Misc. Wanted

“We care about your hair loss”

WE ARE looking for Christmas decorations for our First Annual Christmas Village, in support of Cranbrook Boys and Girls Club. We need trees, stands, lights, etc., in good condition only please. Drop off to The Cranbrook Townsman office, 822 Cranbrook Street N. by Friday Oct. 14.

Capilia Hair & Scalp Centre

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Household Services KOOTENAY DUCT CLEANERS Duct Cleaning EVERYONE can afford $250 whole home $150 mobile home No hidden costs! Professional & Insured Locally owned & operated Toll free 1.844.428.0522

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Transportation

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Ecology, climate change and the Christian Church Orthodox conference seeks to renew conversation on ‘healing earth’

B a r ry Co u lt e r

St. Aidan Orthodox Church in Cranbrook is hosting a unique conference next week, and looking to engage the whole community is a discussion on Christian perspectives on ecology, climate change and connection between culture and the environment. “Healing Earth” — the name of the conference — runs October 13-15 at the Royal Alexandra Hall at the Cranbrook History Centre. A series of compelling guest speakers will hold forth on cultural connection spiritual ecology. Father Andrew Applegate of St. Aidan says the ancient view that culture, spirituality and the environment has become “skewed” and politicized in modern times. It is a conversation that needs to be

resumed among all Christian churches. “The fact that we as Christians need to be paying a lot more attention to what’s going on around us,” Father Applegate said of the impetus for hosting the conference. “The early Christian church, and through the centuries had a very close relationship with nature. Perhaps in modern times that perspective has become skewed. There’s the perspective that we as humans have dominion — but really we are caretakers.” Applegate said the ancient church’s perspective that God is in everything, present in nature and in all cultures isn’t always heard today in the Christian Churchy. “But I think with climate change, and with all that’s going on, all Christian church-

es are looking for that perspective. We’ve allowed this topic to become politicized — and it shouldn’t be that way.” Speakers for the conference include: • Father Michael Oleksa from Alaska, an author, educator and polyglot, who will be discussing cross-cultural communication — his area of expertise. • Kaleeg Hainsworth is an author, poet and backcountry educator, who will discussing climate change. He will be joined by Father Nilos Nellis, an Orthodox priest and “philosopher of the wilderness,” who lives off the grid near Kaslo. • Mark Sandford is the spiritual director of Elijah House International, a multinational Counsellor training organization. He will be talking about

the Church’s place in nature. • Jeremy and Sheree Eisenhauer are featured special guest musicians. Healing Earth: Orthodox Christian Perspectives on Ecology and Climate Change Thursday, Oct. 13, features free public presentations and panel discussion at 6 p.m.with Q and A session to follow. Friday, Oct. 14, and Saturday, Oct. 15 (8 am-5:30 pm), are the all-day conference sessions with the authors/presenters. Breakfast coffee and treats and lunch from the HeidOut are provided. For more information, including registion information, contact: Father Andrew Applegate at 250-420-1582 or Ellen Dearden at 250-4216013.

Choosing Thanksliving This weekend is another one of those many of us have been hurt by others, and wonderful long weekends when we have that we have hurt other people, even if it some time for recreation and renewal. was unintentional. There are good reasons for those emoThe weather is still mostly fine. The leaves are turning into their glorious autumn tions. But we can also choose how much colours and carpeting the ground with a time we give each of those emotions on soft underlay. the stage of our lives. We It’s Thanksgiving choose how much energy and weekend, a time to retime we give to those emomember the blessings in tions. our lives, to enjoy a speOne of the things I’ve discial meal with family and Rev. Yme covered in the past year in a friends, and to exercise our gratitude muscle. Woensdregt whole new way is that life is good. I’ve always been a genFor me, gratitude is erally positive kind of guy. At often a choice. One of my friends tells a story in which he asked a times, my positive outlook is tested by the friend, “How are you doing?” To which the events of life, and there are times I feel friend replies, “I’m grateful.” My friend bitter or resentful or angry or hurt. But I have to say that overall, I am says that it caught him by surprise the first grateful. time…and the second and third as well. And I have discovered that the more I As I reflect on that, what strikes me is the simplicity and power of it—I’m grate- practice it, the easier it becomes to ful. I choose to see the world this way. I choose this path. Gratitude is like a muschoose to see the blessings in my life, to cle that way. So is joy, or faith, or hope. name them, and to express my gratitude The more we exercise it, the stronger it becomes. for all those blessings. The other thing I’ve found is that as I It’s possible for us to choose other ways to see the world. All we need to do is exercise this muscle, it affects other peoscan the headlines, and it’s easy to see ple. Gratitude is infectious. The old saying says, “Smile, and the the world as a scary place … or to view the world with anxiety … or as a place of world smiles with you; cry, and you cry danger. We can find all kinds of reasons alone.” I think that’s only partly true. A to be angry or frustrated with life. We can person who cries or whines or complains find all kinds of reasons to view the world has the power to drag others down with as a place of regret and pain. It’s true that them. The same is true of those who are

grateful or who rejoice in the goodness of life. They lift other people up. I’m grateful. Now that doesn’t mean we need to be grateful all the time. That’s an impossible standard to meet. I’m not grateful all the time. There are times I’m overwhelmed by sadness or pain. And I’m not grateful in the least for mornings. Just ask anyone who knows me. And I know there are some people for whom life is difficult right now. It’s hard, when you’re in the midst of loss or pain, to be grateful. It’s hard to imagine that there’s something good in life when all you feel is the pain. But even so, are there things or persons in your life for whom you are grateful? Have you expressed your gratitude? Might you try it? As we begin to exercise that gratitude muscle, we find that we begin to live out the sense of thanksgiving not just on this weekend, but every day of our lives. We begin a process of thanksliving. It is a life marked by gratitude and praise. It is marked by a posture of receiving the goodness of life rather than always seeking to grasp more and more stuff. We look at our lives from a new perspective, and see that we have enough, that we live out of a space of abundance. How are you? As for me, I’m grateful. Yme Woensdregt is Pastor at Christ Church Anglican in Cranbrook

The Cranbrook Food Bank needs your help. Drop boxes at Safeway and Save On Foods Food Bank office 104-8th Ave. S. • 250-426-7664 (from 10am-3pm)


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